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The murder of Jason Hudson occurred on October 24,
2008, when 29-year-old Jason Hudson and his 57-year-old mother,
Darnell Donerson, were discovered shot to death inside Donerson's home
in Chicago, Illinois.
The family of singer Jennifer Hudson, it was also
reported that Jennifer's seven-year-old nephew Julian King, the son of
her elder sister Julia Hudson, was initially reported missing and an
AMBER Alert was issued; Julian King's body was found on October 27 in
Chicago's West Side area, in a parked car matching the AMBER Alert
description. Autopsy results indicated that Julian King's death was
due to "multiple gunshot wounds." A pistol found in a West Side vacant
lot was confirmed as the murder weapon by Chicago police.
Investigation
On the day that the bodies of Hudson's mother and
brother were discovered, Chicago police took Julia Hudson's estranged
husband William Balfour, 27, into custody but did not file charges
against him. Balfour was on parole and spent nearly seven years in
prison for attempted murder, vehicular hijacking and possession of a
stolen vehicle. The Illinois Department of Corrections' records reveal
one of Balfour's addresses to be the home where Donerson and Jason
Hudson were murdered.
After the Chicago police had held Balfour for the
maximum 48 hours allowable without charging him with a crime, he was
held by the Illinois Department of Corrections on a parole violation.
At the November 10, 2008 parole hearing, the
prisoner review board was told by the Cook County State's Attorney's
office that Balfour's current or former girlfriend told investigators
she saw Balfour with a gun identical to the murder weapon several days
before the murder occurred.
Board chairman Jorge Montes said that although
Balfour may have violated other conditions of his parole, including
failing to get anger management and substance abuse counseling, the
gun allegation alone was sufficient to hold Balfour until a December 3
hearing before the full Illinois Prisoner Review Board.
Montes said that the allegations from the woman
included that Balfour had admitted to her that he was involved in the
murders, but those allegations were not part of the parole review
hearing. Balfour appeared at the hearing without an assigned attorney
because he had not been charged with a crime.
Arrest
On December 1, 2008, Balfour was arrested and
charged with three counts of first-degree murder for the deaths of
Donerson, Jason Hudson and King, as well as one count of felony home
invasion. At a December 3 court hearing in which Balfour was denied
bail, a prosecutor alleged that Balfour had committed the murders out
of anger that his estranged wife was dating another man. Balfour's
attorney Joshua Kutnick said that his client maintained his innocence
in the crimes. Balfour was indicted on December 30. On January 20,
2009, he pleaded not guilty to all charges.
Legacy
In the aftermath of the deaths, Hudson's family
announced the creation of the Hudson-King Foundation for Families of
Slain Victims, a foundation "to care for the needs of families who
have lost relatives to a violent crime," according to a statement
released to the press.
Wikipedia.org
Judge gives Balfour 3 life sentences, calls his
soul 'barren'
July 24, 2012
For the first time since his arrest almost four
years ago, William Balfour spoke out briefly in court as he was about
to be sentenced Tuesday for the murders of three of singer Jennifer
Hudson's family members, offering condolences for the youngest victim.
"My deepest sympathies go to Julian King," he said
of Hudson's 7-year-old nephew, the boy with the big smile who looked
up to Balfour, his stepfather. "I loved him. I still love him,"
Balfour said as he looked across the packed courtroom toward his own
family, not at the Chicago superstar or her relatives seated across
the aisle.
For a moment, the courtroom froze. Balfour's
sister, Sensuous, burst into tears and ran out a side door. Across the
aisle, Jennifer Hudson and her sister, Julia, Balfour's ex-wife, sat
side by side, clutching tissues and dabbing at their eyes.
It was an odd moment in a court hearing that had
little suspense. Under Illinois law, Judge Charles Burns had no choice
but to impose a sentence of life in prison without the possibility of
parole because Balfour had been convicted of more than one murder.
Many in the courtroom were anticipating either
testimony or written statements from Jennifer Hudson and her sister
about the horrific impact the crimes have had on their lives. But with
the sentence predetermined, the sisters chose to keep their grief
private.
The same security detail that had protected the
Oscar-winning star and her family throughout the trial whisked them in
and out of the courthouse Tuesday through the basement. After the
hearing, none of the lawyers involved in the case addressed the throng
of news media waiting in the lobby of the Leighton Criminal Court
Building. Soon after word got out that Jennifer Hudson was gone, the
bank of microphones came down and TV crews left.
Even though the outcome was foregone, the judge
grew emotional as he imposed the sentence, lashing out at Balfour as
he called his claims that he loved Julian "an insult to all of us."
"Your heart is an arctic night, and your soul is as
barren as dark space," Burns said to Balfour in a shaky voice.
In the end, the judge imposed a consecutive life
sentence for each of the murders as well as 120 years for Balfour's
additional convictions for home invasion, possession of a stolen motor
vehicle and aggravated kidnapping.
Burns said he was certain Balfour killed Julian
because he was in the way and could have been a witness against him.
Hudson's mother, Darnell Donerson, 57, and brother, Jason Hudson, 29,
already had been slain in the family's Englewood neighborhood house,
prosecutors said.
Julian "shared his life with you. For sure he
looked up to you," Burns said. "There is no doubt in my mind he looked
up to you as you were putting bullets into his head. I just hope his
terror was short-lived."
A Cook County jury convicted Balfour in May of the
triple murder. Prosecutors alleged that Balfour was upset over his
crumbling marriage to Julia Hudson and jealous that she was seeing
another man.
In court Tuesday, Julian's father, Gregory King,
sat hunched over on the witness stand and appeared to fight back tears
as he recalled the desperate three-day search for the missing boy that
ended when his body was found inside Jason Hudson's stolen SUV on the
West Side. Like the other two victims, he had been shot to death.
"Instantly it was like a chunk of my heart was
ripped out," he said. "I felt hopeless. I was filled with rage for
William Balfour, the man who murdered my son."
King also spoke achingly of missing the little
things about his son -- picking him up from school and going on field
trips with him.
"I even miss his bugging me about SpongeBob
SquarePants, a cartoon character he was kind of afraid of," King said.
During the two-hour hearing, prosecutors called
several victims from Balfour's past crimes, painting a picture of a
man who joined a gang at 15, sold crack cocaine and engaged in other
wrongdoing.
Charles Gardner, 48, testified that he caught
Balfour stealing his SUV in November 1998 and jumped onto the luggage
rack, touching off a wild police chase through several South Side
neighborhoods and along the Dan Ryan Expressway at speeds nearing 100
mph as Balfour tried to shake him off the roof.
Jennifer Hudson glanced at her sister as Gardner
testified, at one point putting her hand to her temple and shaking her
head with a smile of disbelief.
Balfour was captured and eventually pleaded guilty
to attempted murder and vehicular hijacking. He spent seven years in
prison and was still on parole at the time of the triple murder in
October 2008.
Balfour intends to file an appeal. In one issue he
raised in seeking a new trial -- denied Tuesday by the judge -- the
defense argued that Jennifer Hudson should not have been allowed to
testify at trial because she had no direct knowledge of the murders
and her celebrity unfairly influenced the jury.
Jennifer Hudson Family Murders: William Balfour
Sentenced To Life In Prison In Each Of 3 Slayings
By Don Babwin - HuffingtonPost.com
July 24, 2012
CHICAGO — Struggling to contain his anger, a
Chicago judge on Tuesday sentenced Oscar-winner Jennifer Hudson's
former brother-in-law to life in prison for killing her mother,
brother and 7-year-old nephew in what prosecutors say was a fit of
jealous rage.
In blistering comments, Cook County Circuit Judge
Charles Burns rejected William Balfour's claims that he was innocent
of the crimes.
"You have the heart of an arctic night," Burns told
Balfour. "Your soul is as barren as dark space."
Balfour was convicted in May of first-degree murder
in the 2008 shooting deaths of Hudson's 57-year-old mother, Darnell
Donerson; her 29-year-old brother, Jason Hudson; and her 7-year-old
nephew, Julian King.
During the trial, prosecutors portrayed Balfour,
who was married to Hudson's sister, Julia Hudson, as a jealous
estranged husband who often stalked the Hudson family home after he
moved out in early 2008. Balfour's attorneys suggested someone else
committed a crime in the family's three-story house in the Englewood
neighborhood on Chicago's South Side.
Burns' harshest comments Tuesday came in regards to
Julian's death. The judge's voice cracked as he recounted how
terrified the child must have been in the second before he was shot
twice in the head.
"I have no doubt in my mind he looked to you when
you put bullets in his head," the judge said.
Hudson, who attended every day of Balfour's trial
earlier this year, sat next to her sister and dabbed her eyes with a
tissue a couple of times during the hearing, including the 10 minutes
in which Burns put his own anger into words. She did not make a
statement to the judge and left the courtroom without commenting.
Balfour offered his condolences to the Hudson
family while maintaining that he didn't kill their relatives.
"My deepest prayers goes out to Julian King. I
loved him. I still love him," he said. "I'm innocent, your honor."
Burns, however, said he had no doubt "whatsoever"
that Balfour committed the crimes, including the shooting of a little
boy "just because he was there."
"I don't think you have one ounce of remorse in
your soul; I really don't," Burns said.
Illinois does not have the death penalty, and
Balfour faced a mandatory life sentence. The judge sentenced Balfour
to three terms of life in prison plus 120 years on other charges, a
largely symbolic move but one that underlined the judge's feelings.
The killings occurred the morning after Julia
Hudson's birthday, and prosecutors said he became enraged when he
stopped by the home and saw a gift of balloons in the house from her
new boyfriend.
After his estranged wife left for work on the
morning of Oct. 24, 2008, prosecutors said Balfour went back inside
the home with a .45-caliber handgun and shot Hudson's mother. He then
allegedly shot Hudson's brother twice in the head as he lay in bed.
Prosecutors said Balfour then drove off in Jason
Hudson's SUV with Julian, Julia's son, and shot the boy several times
in the head as he lay behind a front seat. His body was found in the
abandoned vehicle miles away after a three-day search.
"Three days under a tarp," Burns said of the time
the boy's body lay in the backseat of the SUV. "Just as if you threw
out the trash and left it to rot."
Although the sentence means Balfour will likely die
in prison, the judge made a point of telling Balfour the sentences
would run one after another, followed by an additional 120 years for
his other convictions, including home invasion, aggravated kidnapping
and possession of a stolen vehicle.
The only family member to speak was Julian's
father, Gregory King, who told of the three days of hoping that his
son might be alive only to find out he was dead. He also spoke about
what had been taken from him by his son's death, of the everyday
moments that make up a relationship between a father and a son.
"I miss picking Julian up from the school bus,"
King said. "I miss going on field trips with him. ... I even miss his
bugging me about Sponge Bob Square Pants, a cartoon character he was
kind of afraid of."
Jennifer Hudson chose not to make a statement.
During the trial, the Academy Award-winning actress for her role in
the 2007 film "Dreamgirls" testified that she had known Balfour since
the eighth grade and always disliked him.
Guilty Verdict in Murder Case That Involved
Singer’s Family
By Monica Davey - The New York Times
May 11, 2012
CHICAGO — The former brother-in-law of Jennifer
Hudson, the singer and actress, was convicted on Friday of murdering
her mother, her brother and her young nephew.
With a crush of news and entertainment reporters
monitoring her every move, Ms. Hudson, who rose to national fame from
one of this city’s toughest neighborhoods, attended the trial, which
ran nearly three weeks, and appeared as prosecutors’ first witness,
saying she had always disliked William Balfour, now convicted in the
case.
“I would tell her over and over again not to marry
William,” Ms. Hudson testified about her sister, Julia, who eventually
did.
Calling more than 80 witnesses, prosecutors said
Mr. Balfour had shot and killed members of the Hudson family in their
home in the Englewood neighborhood in October 2008 after growing
jealous and possessive of Julia Hudson.
Mr. Balfour’s defense team had characterized the
case as largely circumstantial, suggesting that the police hastily
focused on Mr. Balfour in a rush to close a case that drew national
headlines. Mr. Balfour, 31, faces life in prison.
Prosecutors said Mr. Balfour had been to the Hudson
family home on the morning of the shootings, and witnesses said that
he had previously been seen with the gun that was used. But no DNA
evidence or fingerprints proved Mr. Balfour’s involvement, and defense
lawyers told jurors that the work of Ms. Hudson’s brother, Jason —
selling drugs, the defense team said — was more likely what led to the
shootings.
The jury, six men and six women, deliberated during
parts of three days, and had indicated not long before they announced
their verdict that they were split. They were sequestered during
deliberations in the high-profile case.
The daily machinations of the trial had little to
do with Ms. Hudson’s celebrity, which was, nonetheless, ever-present.
Reports on the trial noted her tears, her bowed head, her fourth-row
seat, her departures from the courtroom and her clothes.
Ms. Hudson drew national attention with appearances
on “American Idol” in 2004, then went on to win an Oscar for her role
in “Dreamgirls.” In a way, the trial was a reminder of how much her
life has been altered.
Ms. Hudson, who testified that she began singing at
age 7 at a Baptist church here, no longer lived in her mother’s home
in Englewood, a neighborhood troubled by violence and where she said
her sister had worked many jobs, including at a Burger King and as a
school bus driver. Not long before the deaths, Ms. Hudson told jurors,
she had left signed, blank checks for her mother, Darnell Donerson, to
pay for items like the family’s gas bill, had bought her sister a
computer and had given her brother an S.U.V., apparently the same one
that the nephew, Julian King, 7, was later found dead inside.
Chicago police describe finding Jennifer
Hudson's nephew, 7, dead in SUV
May 01, 2012
The young boy's left arm protruded from beneath a
dirty shower curtain, resting lifeless on the rear seat of the
abandoned white SUV.
Amid the empty pop bottles, papers and scattered
trash, singer Jennifer Hudson's 7-year-old nephew, Julian King, lay
dead with two bullet wounds to the back of his head.
It was an awful end to an already tragic case. As
news reporters flocked to the scene and helicopters whirred over the
West Side that Monday morning in October 2008, Chicago police
detectives began the painstaking task of photographing the boy's body
and taking inventory of each bit of evidence found in the vehicle.
That evidence was detailed for jurors Monday as the
second week got under way in William Balfour's trial on charges that
days earlier he had gunned down Hudson's mother, Darnell Donerson, and
brother Jason Hudson because he was upset Hudson's sister, Julia,
wanted to divorce him. Prosecutors allege that Balfour then kidnapped
Julian and shot him in Jason Hudson's stolen SUV before ditching the
vehicle in the 1300 block of South Kolin Avenue.
For several hours Monday, investigators described
how they combed through the vehicle, dusting it for fingerprints and
using special lights on carpets and upholstery to identify potential
evidence.
Balfour's attorneys have said that despite the
meticulous forensic investigation, none of the physical evidence —
fingerprints, DNA or gunshot residue — connects Balfour to the
slayings.
Balfour, who teared up last week as prosecutors
showed jurors autopsy photos of Julian on a screen, sat expressionless
during Monday's testimony, glancing occasionally toward photos
displayed of Julian's bloodied body.
The SUV was found Oct. 27, 2008, three days after
the shootings at the Hudson family home in the Englewood neighborhood.
The next day, detectives organized about 90 recent Chicago Police
Academy graduates into two search parties that scoured the area
between the West Side apartment where Balfour was arrested and the
street where the SUV was found about two miles away.
Officer Terrence Fowler testified Monday he was
only about a block into the search, walking shoulder-to-shoulder with
other officers, when he swept his metal baton through some high weeds
and garbage and struck an object.
"I heard a clink," Fowler testified. "I used my
baton to scatter some debris out of the way, and that's when I
observed a gun."
Prosecutors allege that the .45-caliber handgun —
found about a block from the SUV containing Julian's body — had been
stolen from Jason Hudson just weeks before the killings.
Before testimony began Monday, Judge Charles Burns
granted a request by the Tribune and other news organizations to
release the 911 recording in which Julia Hudson begged dispatchers for
help after she found her mother fatally shot.
The singer's sister had just returned from work and
discovered a bullet hole in the front door and her mother on the
floor, lifeless and bloody. She ran out of the house and called 911,
not realizing her brother also was dead inside the house or that
Julian was missing.
In the nearly three-minute call, Julia Hudson can
be heard sobbing as an emergency dispatcher initially appeared to
downplay the seriousness of what she was saying.
She appeared to realize that her mother may not be
the only one in harm's away.
"Where's my brother?" she asked.
Then moments later, she told someone nearby that
she can't find her son.
"I don't know where Julian is," she cried.
Neighbor: I saw William Balfour spying on Hudson
family home
May 01, 2012
A former friend and neighbor of Jennifer Hudson’s
family testified today he saw William Balfour spying on the Hudsons'
home late one night in the summer before three members of the singer’s
family were slain.
Reginald Jones, 55, testified that he was good
friends with Hudson’s brother, Jason Hudson, and would often perform
odd jobs for the family, including walking their dog, fixing cars and
running errands.
Jones, who admitted he had a crack cocaine habit,
also bought drugs from Jason Hudson and would occasionally help him
sell “dime bags” of crack from the Englewood home.
In the summer of 2008, Jones testified, he was
walking back toward the rear of the Hudson home late one night when he
was startled by Balfour, who was sitting in the dark on the bottom of
the rear stairs underneath the bedroom window of his estranged wife,
Julia Hudson, who is Jennifer Hudson’s sister.
“I was walking and somebody says, ‘Reggie, what the
hell are you doin’ here?’” Jones testified. “It shocked me.”
Balfour, 30, is accused of gunning down Jason
Hudson, 29, mother Darnell Donerson, 57, and 7-year-old Julian King on
Oct. 24, 2008, allegedly because he was angry his wife wanted a
divorce and was seeing someone new.
In a tense cross-examination, Jones admitted that
he would sometimes be at the Hudson home and would open the door for
customers looking to buy cocaine from Jason Hudson, who had been shot
in the leg in a home invasion a few years earlier and couldn’t get
around well.
Jones also testified that on one occasion, he
helped Jason Hudson cook cocaine into crack in one of the kitchens in
the home.
That testimony helps bolster defense theories that
Jason Hudson’s drug business could have led to the murders.
In other testimony today, Maria Wilkes, 17, said
Balfour approached her in an Englewood park in the summer of 2008 and
started spouting off about his wife and how she was being unfaithful.
“He was talking to me about his wife and how she
was cheating on him,” said Wilkes, who was 13 years old at the time.
“He was just saying how she got a new boyfriend and how he didn’t want
to leave her…He said he was going to have to deal with it.”
Wilkes, who lived in the neighborhood but did not
known Balfour well, said she was walking down Yale Avenue later that
summer and overheard an argument between Balfour and Julia Hudson
outside on the street.
“I heard him tell her that if she was giong to call
the police, he would kill her and her family,” Wilkes said.
Under cross-examination by Balfour’s attorney,
Edward Koziboski, Wilkes said she never told her story to police and
only divulged it when prosecutors approached her last July. She also
said she did not hear anything that Julia Hudson said during the
alleged argument.
Actress Takes Stand at Trial in the Killings of
Relatives
By Monica Davey - The New York Times
April 23, 2012
CHICAGO — Preparations for the arrival of Jennifer
Hudson, the singer and actress and beloved product of Chicago, at this
city’s criminal courthouse were elaborate and months in the works: a
private entrance was readied, a crush of news and entertainment
reporters were required to sign pledges to abide by stringent rules of
courtroom decorum and potential jurors were quizzed about their
knowledge of “American Idol” and “Dreamgirls.”
But when Ms. Hudson appeared, at last, in a
courtroom on Monday, the dizziness over her celebrated rise to stardom
quickly gave way to the bleak circumstances that had brought her — the
shooting deaths of her 7-year-old nephew, her brother and her mother
in one of Chicago’s grittiest South Side neighborhoods, Englewood.
Glamour was wiped away.
“Yes, that’s my mommy,” Ms. Hudson testified on
Monday afternoon, when asked to look at a photograph. Ms. Hudson told
jurors that she had slept in a bed with her mother until she was 16
years old. Even as an adult, she said, she communicated with her
mother every day, often by text messages that began arriving early in
the morning. Nothing arrived one morning in October 2008, Ms. Hudson
testified, in her first hint that something was wrong.
Ms. Hudson was the first prosecution witness called
in a murder trial against William Balfour, her former brother-in-law,
who prosecutors say shot Ms. Hudson’s family members in 2008 after
growing jealous and possessive of his wife, Julia Hudson, Ms. Hudson’s
sister.
Jennifer Hudson, who first drew national attention
with appearances on “American Idol” in 2004 and went on to win an
Oscar for her role as the singer Effie in “Dreamgirls,” was undeniably
the most anticipated participant in this trial. Until the moment she
stepped up to the witness stand, there was speculation about when and
whether she would appear.
In the end, she answered questions for only about
30 minutes, the judge pausing to offer her time to compose herself and
urging her, at one point, to speak up and slow down. Ms. Hudson said
she had been traveling, in Florida, in 2008 when her family members
were killed, but quickly flew home, and went to the Cook County
medical examiner’s office to identify her mother, Darnell Donerson,
and her brother, Jason Hudson, both of whom were found inside the
family home, as well as a young nephew, Julian King, who was later
found inside an S.U.V. that was taken from the home.
Mr. Balfour, who went to grade school with Ms.
Hudson and who could face life in prison, has pleaded not guilty. In
an opening statement on Monday, his lawyer suggested that Ms. Hudson’s
prominence had left law enforcement authorities feeling special
pressure to solve the case quickly, leading them to focus on Mr.
Balfour right away, despite a lack of physical evidence against him.
But a prosecutor said Mr. Balfour, who had been
estranged from Julia Hudson, had repeatedly threatened her, even
pledging that he would kill her family first, then her. The lawyers on
both sides seemed to agree about only one thing — a grim picture of
lives in Englewood, a neighborhood where the drug trade seemed to
thrive and where gunshots were heard but sometimes ignored because
they were too ordinary.
Jennifer Hudson told jurors she had not liked Mr.
Balfour ever, not in the sixth-grade class they attended together in
Englewood and not later. “None of us wanted her to marry him,” she
said of her sister.
“I tried to keep my distance with William any
chance I got,” Jennifer Hudson told the jurors. “Where he was, I tried
not to be.”
Many faces of William Balfour
October 28, 2008
During his brief marriage to Julia Hudson, William
Balfour seemed to embrace the role of stepdad.
He declared himself a "proud parent" on MySpace and
decorated his page with photos of a smiling Julian King. The boy also
is mentioned in a seven-line autobiography Balfour wrote for the
social networking site.
On their Englewood block, the two often could be
seen walking to the park or enjoying barbecues on the front lawn.
Balfour, 27, helped support his fledgling family with money he earned
as a Cosi baker and frequently indulged his stepson with boys-only
trips to Popeyes and McDonald's, neighbors say.
Balfour's affection seemed so genuine that friends
and relatives struggle to reconcile the involved stepfather with the
man authorities call a "person of interest" in the 7-year-old boy's
homicide. Authorities believe Julian's shooting death is linked to the
Friday slayings of his grandmother, Darnell Donerson, and his uncle,
Jason Hudson.
"The guy they're talking about is nothing like the
guy I knew," neighbor Ante Moore said. "I'm not saying he was a saint,
but I do know that he was trying to turn his life around."
Police named Balfour as a suspect in an Amber Alert
released Friday. He currently is at Statesville Correctional Center in
Joliet; authorities say he violated his parole by becoming a murder
suspect.
Balfour's criminal rap sheet dates back at least a
decade. Court records show Balfour was arrested in 1998 after police
spotted him driving a stolen vehicle. They tried to pull him over near
the 6900 block of South Yale Avenue -- about a block from the Hudson
family home -- but Balfour stopped the car and fled, according to
court records.
Balfour was out on bond when a man saw Balfour
breaking into his brand-new Chevrolet Suburban on Nov. 29, 1998, and
ran outside to stop him, court records show. Balfour, then 17, drove
off with the man hanging from the roof rack.
As police followed, Balfour drove through alleys,
front yards, through a police barricade and onto the Dan Ryan
Expressway -- all with the victim clinging to the vehicle, records
indicate. He eventually crashed into a telephone pole and fled.
The victim suffered burns from fallen electrical
wires as well as other injuries.
Balfour was sentenced to seven years in prison
after pleading guilty to attempted murder and car hijacking in
September 1999. He was released in May 2006, returned to the
neighborhood where he grew up and reconnected with Julia Hudson, one
of the three Hudson siblings he had known while attending Yale
Elementary School.
She was a single mother who drove a school bus,
lived with her mother and depended on her relatives to help care for
Julian. Balfour, who calls himself "Flex" for his chiseled physique,
was smitten with the Rubenesque Hudson, who is four years his senior,
his mother said.
"He was in love with Julia," Michele Balfour said.
"And Julia loved him."