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LANSING, Mich. — A prison
parolee and registered sex offender is suspected of
killing five women in the city in just over a month,
police said Friday.
Matthew Emmanuel
Macon, 27, of Lansing, also could face charges for a
sixth killing from 2004.
Lansing Police Chief
Mark Alley said murder and assault charges were being
pursued against Macon, who was paroled from state prison
June 26. Macon also is a registered sex offender, Alley
said.
He had been in
prison off and on since 2001, returning twice for parole
violations after serving more than a year-and-a-half for
larceny from a person, said state Department of
Corrections spokesman Russ Marlan.
Macon also had an
extensive juvenile criminal history, including two sex
offenses, breaking and entering, larceny and unlawfully
driving away an automobile, Marlan said.
He was arrested
Tuesday in connection with the deaths this summer of
Ruth Hallman, 76; Deborah Cooke, 36; Debra Renfors, 46;
Sandra Eichorn, 64; and Karen Yates, 41.
He also may be
charged with the 2004 death of Barbara Jean Tuttle of
Lansing.
Police had been
looking for clues and help from the public in five
unsolved homicides since late July, including two this
week — which had raised concerns a serial killer was on
the loose in the state capital, a city of 114,000
located about 75 miles northwest of Detroit. Alley
declined to discuss the circumstances surrounding the
arrest, or any motive for the homicides.
Investigators had
noted similarities between several of the slayings and a
series of unsolved 2003 assaults. The 2003 victims were
middle-aged or older women who lived alone, as were a
number of the recent homicide victims.
Yates died two days
after Eichorn was found dead in the house she rented on
Lansing's west side. On Tuesday, a 56-year-old woman
received non-life-threatening injuries in an attack in
her home on the city's east side. Her dog heard the
commotion and charged the man, causing him to flee the
scene.
Police credited the
woman for providing key details that helped focus their
investigation and led to a sketch of a suspect being
distributed to the public.
At the time, police
said the person responsible for that attack was
connected to the deaths of Eichorn, Cooke, Renfors,
Yates and Hallman, who was found beaten in her home July
26 and died later.
Cooke's body was
found Aug. 6 in a city park. Renfors was found dead Aug.
9 in a house.
Victims all lived
alone, cops say; survivor out of hospital
By Suzette Hackney -
Detroit Free Press
Friday, August 31,
2007
The crimes all
appeared to fit a profile. The victims were women
who lived alone and were beaten.
But Thursday,
Lansing police said residents could rest a little easier.
A man authorities say is responsible for five homicides
and one assault starting in late July and continuing
through Wednesday had been arrested.
The spree by day
and victims:
• July 26:
Ruth Hallman, 76, a neighborhood activist and mother of
Lansing Councilwoman Carol Wood, was found beaten in her
West Lapeer Street home. She died from the injuries two
days later. Hallman had long stood for safe streets and
often provided information to police about drug houses.
• Aug. 7:
Deborah Kaye Cooke, 36. Her body was found in Hunter
Park on the city's east side. Officers were on routine
patrol about 4:30 a.m. when they spotted her body next
to a tree. She was bloodied and beaten in the face and
naked below the waist.
• Aug. 9:
Debra Renfors, 46, was found dead in her new home in the
1000 block of North Washington in the Old Town district.
Friends said Renfors was trying to leave a life of
prostitution and would clean homes to avoid the
temptation of returning to the streets. She moved from
Mt. Clemens to Lansing about seven years ago.
• Monday:
Sandra Eichorn, 64, was found dead in a home she was
renting in the 1800 block of South Genesee on the west
side. Eichorn, a General Motors Corp. plant retiree, had
been renting the house for about a year and lived by
herself. She was a NASCAR fan.
• Tuesday: A
56-year-old woman was assaulted in her home in the 200
block of Jones Street on the east side. The woman was
able to call police from her home after the assault.
Police said the attacker, who claimed to be looking for
work, entered her back door and struck her in the head.
The woman's dog
scared off the man and he fled. Police said the woman's
description -- and evidence inside the home -- led them
to the suspect. Police would not identify the victim,
who has been released from the hospital.
• Wednesday:
Karen Delgado-Yates, 41, was found injured in a vacant
house in the 1100 block of Hickory Street. Investors
interested in buying the house found Delgado-Yates. She
died on the way to the hospital. Delgado-Yates also had
a history of prostitution and had lived in a homeless
shelter for a while.
Suspected Serial Killer Charged
With Michigan Murder
Thursday, September 06, 2007
Associated Press
LANSING, Mich. — A suspected
serial killer was charged Wednesday with open murder in
the death of a woman on the city's west side, and more
charges could follow in the slayings of five other women.
Matthew Emmanuel
Macon, 27, of Lansing, was ordered held without bond
during his video arraignment in Lansing District Court
after being named as a suspect last week.
Macon, a recent
prison parolee and registered sex offender, had been in
prison off and on since 2001 before being paroled in
late June. He was handcuffed and wearing an orange jail
jumpsuit while standing beside his attorney, Mike
O'Briant.
Macon waived the
right to have a preliminary examination within 14 days.
The preliminary exam was set for Oct. 30-31 in the death
of Sandra Eichorn, 64, who was found dead in her home
Aug. 27. Macon consistently responded to Judge Patrick
F. Cherry's procedural questions by answering, "Yes sir,
your honor."
After the arraignment, Macon's family
members declined comment to the media
and referred questions to his lawyer.
Macon's state of
mind was good, O'Briant said, adding that he saw no need
to seek a referral for a psychiatric evaluation.
"I do not believe
he's incompetent," O'Briant said.
O'Briant said
Macon's family is supportive of him and "his demeanor is
up." O'Briant plans to file a motion to change venue,
citing public statements about the case made by the
Lansing mayor and police chief.
Lansing police
announced last week the apprehension of a suspected
"serial killer," and Mayor Virg Bernero called the
suspect — who had not been named yet — a "monster."
The judge on
Wednesday issued a restraining order preventing law
enforcement officials and lawyers from speaking publicly
about certain aspects of the case. He also suppressed
parts of arrest warrants that have details about why
Macon was charged.
O'Briant said
Macon's relatives wanted the public to know that their "hearts
go out to the victims.
"Let's not forget
about them in this. There's some people out there with
some very big grief."
Macon also was
charged with first-degree home invasion and assault with
intent to do great bodily harm less than murder at
another Lansing home Aug. 28. The unnamed victim was
hospitalized with non-life threatening injuries, and
police have credited her dog with saving her and have
credited the woman with providing key information.
Macon also could
face charges in the deaths this summer of Ruth Hallman,
76; Deborah Cooke, 36; Debra Renfors, 46; and Karen
Yates, 41. A number of the victims were beaten and found
in Lansing houses.
Police also want
Macon to be charged with the 2004 death of Barbara Jean
Tuttle, 45, of Lansing. Both Tuttle and Renfors were
found dead in the same house.
Matthew "Chilly" Emmanuel Macon
Named Suspect in Michigan Serial Murders
By David Lohr
September 4, 2007
LANSING, Mich. (Crime
Library)
Last week investigators
announced 27-year-old Matthew "Chilly" Emmanuel Macon,
who has been in prison off and on since 2001, is a
suspect in at least five unsolved murders that occurred
this summer in mid-Michigan. He is also being looked at
as a possible suspect in a sixth murder from 2004.
Police arrested
Macon last Tuesday on suspicion of not reporting to his
parole officer and not registering as a sex offender. He
also had an outstanding warrant for breaking and
entering. Macon has an extensive criminal history,
including two sex offenses, larceny and unlawfully
driving an automobile.
Investigators have not yet
provided details on what evidence they have connecting
Macon to the murder cases, but they have noted
similarities between Macon and a description given to
them by a witness.
"I am confident we
have the right person in custody," Lansing police Chief
Mark Alley said during a news conference Thursday,
describing Macon as a "serial killer."
The most recent
killings began on July 26; one month after Macon was
paroled for his third larceny conviction. On that day
76-year-old Ruth Hallman was attacked in her West Lapeer
Street home. Her injuries were fatal and she died three
days later at a local hospital.
Less than two weeks
later, on August 7, 2007, police found the body of 36-year-old
Deborah Kaye Cooke under a tree in an east side park.
Police have released few details on her murder, saying
only that she was physically assaulted.
Two days after
Deborah's murder police responded to a 911 call at 1017
North Washington Avenue. Upon arrival police found the
body of 46-year-old Debra Renfors. As with the previous
case, police would not release any information about how
the victim was killed.
According to an
August 11 news article published in the online edition
of the Lansing State Journal, Chief Alley said
the Renfors and Cooke murders did not appear to be
connected.
On August 27, a
relative of 64-year-old Sandra Eichorn found her body on
the floor of her South Genesee Drive home. Police
confirmed the victim was murdered but would not comment
on a cause of death.
Following Sandra's
murder Alley announced the forming of a joint task force,
made up of Lansing Police, the FBI and Michigan State
Police. Alley said the task force was going to look for
connections between Sandra's murder and other recent
unsolved homicides.
Before police could
finish connecting the dots on the murder cases they were
called to the scene of another attack. On August 28, a
56-year-old woman was assaulted in her Jones Street home.
A man who claimed to be looking for work entered the
back door of her house and struck her on the head.
Luckily her dog was able to scare off the attacker. The
victim, who has not been identified, provided police
with a description of the suspect.
"This victim was
brutally attacked and she stayed coherent, articulate
and like in any investigation, we got the break and
things started to fall in our favor and break wide open,"
Lansing Police Department Capt. Ray Hall told Wlns.com.
The final attack
came just one day later. On August 29, a group of
prospective property investors discovered 41-year-old
Karen Delgado-Yates barely alive in a vacant home at
1115 Hickory Street. An ambulance quickly transported
Karen to Sparrow Hospital, but she died en route.
Last week police
released a composite sketch of the suspect based on the
description given by the woman who survived his attack.
According to Macon's sister the sketch proves her
brother is innocent.
"The guy that's a
suspect, his nose is very different," Melissa Macon told
Wlns.com on Sunday. "The guy doesn't have facial hair,
but my brother's face will never be cleanly shaven,
because even when he does shave there are still hairs.
Police just want to get somebody. People are thinking
they are safe because my brother is locked up now, but
they're not safe."
Macon's father, Jim
Henry Macon Jr., agrees.
"[The sketch]
doesn't look anything like him so I don't know what to
think," he said in an interview with the Lansing
State Journal. "You're innocent until proven guilty
... I guess his freedom's in God's hands."
Investigators are
trying to determine if Macon might also be connected to
other area attacks that took place in 2003. In addition,
Deborah Kaye Cooke's murder took place in the same home
where 45-year-old Barbara Jean Tuttle was bludgeoned to
death in 2004. Police now believe the cases may be
related.
According to Chief
Alley, Macon will be charged sometime this week in five
homicides and the assault. The suspect is currently
being held in a maximum-security single-person cell at
the Ingham County Jail.
"The despicable
individual responsible for the heinous rampage through
our community has been captured," Mayor Virg Bernero
said at Thursday's news conference. "Our nightmare is
over."
CrimeLibrary.com
Macon’s early
life marked by violence, crime
September 6, 2007
By the time Matthew E. Macon pleaded guilty at age 14 to
sexually assaulting a girl with a stick, he had seen a
lot of violence.
Court documents reveal that Macon’s
father was violent and abusive. His older sister was
placed in foster care in 1983 after her father was
accused of sexually abusing her.
Then, by age 16, at a 1996 Ingham
County juvenile court hearing, a court referee said
although Macon was making progress in a program for sex
offenders, he required “lifetime vigilance.”
“Sexual offending - like an addiction,”
the court referee’s notes from the hearing say about
Macon.
Police say Macon killed at least six
women. He was arraigned Wednesday on a murder charge in
connection with the death of 64-year-old Sandra Eichorn
on Aug. 27.
Macon’s attorney, Mike O’Briant,
would not comment on his client’s past, citing a gag
order. Family members said O’Briant instructed them not
to make any further public statements.
Macon, who underwent years of court-ordered
treatment for sexual offenders, never was charged with a
violent crime as an adult, according to court records.
He lived in at least three homes for delinquent youths
before he was 18.
It is known that at least one of the
five recent homicide victims also was sexually assaulted
with a stick. Police arrested Macon last week on charges
including failing to update his address on a sex
offender registry.
The vast majority of adolescents who
commit sex offenses do not become sex offenders, serial
rapists or even serial killers, said Dr. Bob Geffner, an
expert on sexual assault, who is president of the
Institute on Violence Abuse and Trauma at Alliant
International University in San Diego.
Troubled path
The fact that Macon might have
witnessed his older sister being sexually abused and
with his history of acting out sexually, means Macon
also might have been abused as a youth, Geffner said.
“If nobody dealt with the trauma,
anger and hostility,” Geffner said, “that increases the
likelihood it will come out … The anger becomes
aggressive and turns outward.”
Court records detail a troubled path
after 1983.
Macon ran away from a foster care
home in 1989. He was considered a “delinquent court ward.”
Also in 1989, Macon was charged with
breaking into a Lansing bike shop and a comic club. He
pleaded guilty.
In 1992, he was sent to Boys Town, a
facility in Nebraska for delinquent children.
In custody for years
He appeared in Ingham County juvenile
court in November 1994 after escaping from Highfields, a
home for juvenile offenders in Onondaga. He admitted to
taking a car from the facility and, with a friend,
breaking into a grocery store and stealing food,
according to a plea agreement.
In May 1995, he was sent to W.J.
Maxey Boys Training School, a facility for delinquent
youth, ages 12 to 21, near Ann Arbor. It provides sexual
offender treatment, according to the state Department of
Human Services.
Macon remained at Maxey in the
court’s temporary custody through May 1996.
In October 1997, he completed a sex
offender treatment program. Court records show that
social workers believed the likelihood he would commit
another sex offense was “very slim.”
State police confirm: Macon
confessed to killing LCC prof
Claude McCollum
leaves jail on bond, awaits new trial in case
Christine Rook and Kevin Grasha -
Lansing State Journal
October 17, 2007
The shackles came off of Claude
McCollum on Tuesday.
He's not quite free. He must wear an
electronic tether.
But his conviction in the 2005 rape
and slaying of a community college professor was thrown
out. He'll get a new trial. And a state police detective
on Tuesday acknowledged another man has confessed to the
crime.
That confession by accused serial
killer Matthew E. Macon is what caused investigators to
re-examine video evidence from 2005, which might show
McCollum was not at the crime scene.
"It's going to prove or be part of
proving the innocence of McCollum," Michigan State
Police Detective Lt. Jamie Corona said of the video.
Corona is a key member of a task
force set up to reinvestigate the death of Carolyn
Kronenberg, 60, who was attacked on the Lansing
Community College campus.
Was the wrong person punished? Who is
the right one?
"I'm trying to be OK with whatever
happens," said Kronenberg's longtime companion Doug
Albert, 58, of Lansing.
New chance
Shortly before 1 p.m. Tuesday,
McCollum, 30, walked out of the Ingham County Jail, free
on bond in a shirt, tie and slacks brought from home.
He was ready to reclaim his life.
McCollum spent more than 1 1/2 years
in prison for the attack on Kronenberg - a woman he says
he never met.
McCollum's personal recognizance bond
was set that morning at $100,000 by Ingham County
Circuit Judge James Giddings. His family won't pay
unless he flees.
The Rev. Ben Wade, the family
minister, was at the bond hearing. He said: "I wanted to
give a shout. It was like the walls had come down."
Wade, of Lansing's Tithe Missionary
Baptist Church, will check on McCollum a few times a
week and help him find a job.
As a condition of his bond, McCollum
will live in Lansing with one of his aunts, 62-year-old
Sharon Nevels.
Nevels said she always knew her mild-mannered
and soft-spoken nephew was innocent. "We've gotten this
far," she said. "I believe it will all work out."
Dismissal might be sought
McCollum's attorney, Hugh Clarke Jr.,
is preparing for his client's new trial.
"I'm never afraid to go to trial -
not with what I know about this case," Clarke said after
Tuesday's hearing.
He may ask the court to dismiss the
case.
In asking that McCollum be released
on bond, Prosecutor Stuart Dunnings III said, "I do not
believe he would pose a risk to our public safety."
That comment is "very telling about
where they are going with this case," said Ron Bretz, a
Thomas M. Cooley Law School professor who worked for 20
years as a public defender and still consults with
criminal defense attorneys.
Steven Drizin of the Center on
Wrongful Convictions at Northwestern University's law
school, who has followed McCollum's case, said Dunnings'
statement to the court that McCollum does not pose a
threat to public safety speaks volumes about the
prosecution's belief that he may be innocent.
"If the state truly believed he were
guilty, they would be fighting tooth and nail to keep
him locked up to protect public safety," Drizin said.
At Tuesday's news conference,
McCollum talked about how he wants to go back to school,
get a job and "earn a decent living."
Asked why he believes he was
initially prosecuted, McCollum said: "Because I was
available."
Could Lansing's justice system have
been in error? "As long as we have people that are
human," Corona said, "we're going to have mistakes."
Another suspect?
Macon is suspected by police in a
string of slayings dating to 2004. Officially, though,
the 28-year-old prison parolee has been charged in the
death of just one woman and with the assault of another.
For weeks rumors have circulated that
Macon had confessed in the Kronenberg case, but
officials refused to go on the record, citing a gag
order on the case.
The Lansing man's lawyer Mike
O'Briant declined to comment on Corona's statement,
saying: "That's confidential information."
Corona confirmed Tuesday that Macon
confessed.
The Lansing State Journal asked: "I
understand we have a confession from Macon that he
killed Kronenberg. Is that true?"
"Yes," Corona said, adding that he
saw transcripts of the investigator interviews with
Macon.
Confirmation of a confession by Macon
on the same day he was released somewhat surprised
McCollum, who has always maintained his innocence. "I
can't ask for too much more," he said. "It's just
another stepping stone ... towards me proving my
innocence."
McCollum's new trial, which has yet
to be scheduled, might draw scrutiny on the quality of
police work in 2005. Questions have been raised about an
interrogation of McCollum conducted by LCC and Lansing
police detectives in 2005. And the video that Corona
says can prove McCollum's innocence was in police and
the prosecution's hands all along.
"It appears to me an innocent man
goes free," Corona said.
Lansing Man
Ordered Tried in Deaths of 2
By Kathy Barks Hoffman - The Associated Press
Monday, November 5,
2007
LANSING, Mich.
-- A man suspected of killing several women in this city
over several terrifying weeks was ordered Monday to
stand trial on murder charges in two of the deaths.
Judge Patrick Cherry
bound Matthew Emmanuel Macon over for trial after a
preliminary hearing in which a Michigan State Police
forensic expert testified that genetic evidence found at
the two crime scenes matched Macon's DNA profile.
Macon is charged
with the August killings of Karen Delgado-Yates, 41, and
Sandra Eichorn, 64. Cherry dismissed charges of criminal
sexual conduct, home invasion and failure to register
his residence with authorities, as Macon is required to
do as a registered sex offender.
Macon also is
suspected in the deaths of Ruth Hallman, 76; Deborah
Cooke, 36; and Debra Renfors, 46. A number of the
victims were beaten and found in Lansing houses.
Police also want
Macon to be charged with the 2004 death of Barbara Jean
Tuttle, 45, of Lansing. Tuttle's body was found in the
same house where Renfors' was later discovered.
Macon, 28, who had
been in prison off and on since 2001, was paroled in
late June.
Mike O'Briant,
Macon's attorney, said during the hearing that there
were no eyewitness reports of Macon attacking the women
and that there were some errors made in the DNA testing
of materials found at the crime scene.
"It just takes a
little evidence" to send Macon to trial, O'Briant told
reporters afterward. "Keep an open mind."
A gag order issued
in the case kept him and Catherine Emerson, an assistant
prosecuting attorney in Ingham County, from saying more.
No trial date has been set.
Suspected serial killer to stand trial for murder,
assault
Kevin Grasha and Christine Rook - Lansing State Journal
November 5, 2007
A judge ruled today that Matthew E.
Macon will stand trial for killing two women and
assaulting another this summer.
Macon, 28, of Lansing, is charged
with murder in connection with the deaths of Sandra
Eichorn and Karen Delgado-Yates. No trial date has been
set. Macon also will stand trial for assaulting Linda
Chapel Jackson in her home. Authorities say Chapel
Jackson survived the attack because her dog chased away
Macon.
DNA found on items at two crime
scenes matched Macon’s DNA profile, a forensic scientist
testified today at a preliminary hearing in 54A District
Court. The hearing, which began last week and concluded
this morning, was to determine if Macon would stand
trial.
Jeffrey Nye, a forensics expert with
the Michigan State Police, linked Macon to Eichorn’s
house, where her son found her dead Aug. 27, as well as
the vacant house where Karen Delgado-Yates was found
barely alive two days later.
District Judge Patrick Cherry today
dismissed a criminal sexual conduct charge related to
the Delgado-Yates case.
“The evidence … is sufficiently
sketchy,” Cherry said in making his ruling.
Nye conducted a DNA analysis of a
Stanley work glove that was found at Eichorn’s South
Genesee home.
“The DNA profile from the cuff of
that glove matched that of Mr. Macon,” he said.
He said the DNA found on a Cincinnati
Reds baseball cap at 1115 Hickory Street also matched
the known DNA profile of Macon.
That is the location where
Delgado-Yates was found barely alive on Aug. 29. She
later died.
Macon’s attorney, Mike O’Briant, said
after the hearing it is possible errors were made in the
DNA testing.
“DNA evidence is very complicated,”
O’Briant said. “There’s a lot of room for mistakes — and
I’ll just leave it at that.”
Macon also is charged with torturing
Delgado-Yates. Assistant Prosecutor Catherine Emerson
today described evidence that Delgado-Yates, as she was
clinging to life, was dragged to a basement drain and
then back upstairs to the living room.
“It was brutal, inhumane and sadistic,”
Emerson said in court.
A forensic pathologist testified
Delgado-Yates suffered massive head injuries, possibly
after being struck by a toilet tank lid found in the
home’s living room. She also suffered a skull fracture
and four broken ribs.
Macon is suspected in a string of
homicides dating back to 2004.