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Desmond TURNER
Classification: Mass murderer
Characteristics:
Robbery
Number of victims: 7
Date of murder:
June 1,
2006
Date of arrest:
2 days after (surrenders)
Date of birth: 1977
Victims profile:Emma
Valdez, 46; her husband, Alberto Covarrubias, 56; Flora
Albarran, 22, Valdez's daughter; Magno Albarran, 29,
Flora's husband; Luis Albarran, 5, Flora Albarran's son;
Alberto Covarrubias, 11, and David Covarrubias, 8.
Method of murder:
Shooting
Location: Indianapolis,
Indiana, USA
Status:
Sentenced to life in prison without parole on October
20, 2009
Desmond Turner sentenced to life for Hamilton Ave.
killings
By Steve Jefferson
- Wthr.com
October 22, 2009
Indianapolis -
Desmond Turner, the man accused of killing seven family
members inside a home on the near east side in June
2006, received a life sentence without parole Friday
morning.
Turner's family
cried in the courtroom when Superior Court Judge Robert
Altice handed down the sentence.
Turner's attorney
says his client plans to appeal.
"Our client is
innocent," said Brent Westerfield, Turner's attorney.
"He did not commit these crimes. He did not kill the
people at 560 North Hamilton."
"I'm sure there
will be an appeal," said Marion County Prosecutor Carl
Brizzi. "In fact, when the judge formally sentences him,
he'll go through his appelate rights. But I gotta tell
you, and you guys sat in the courtroom the entire trial,
this was a very clean trial."
One of the
relatives of the victims was pleased with the sentence.
"This is great
news," said Maria Flores. "We were able to sleep better
last night. A lot of weight off of our shoulders. And
now we can be more happy."
Altice said
Thursday after finding Turner guilty that the state
proved its case against the murder suspect. Altice convicted
Turner, 31, on 23 counts stemming from the June 1, 2006,
deaths of Emma Valdez, 46; her husband, Alberto
Covarrubias, 56; the couple's young sons, Alberto, 11,
and David, 8; and Valdez's adult son and daughter, Magno
Albarran and Flora Albarran and Flora's son Luis, 5.
Brizzi said he did
not have the evidence needed to meet the high standard
of proof required for a capital conviction. The
prosecutors' case was built on witness accounts and
other circumstantial evidence. They lacked a murder
weapon or any physical evidence tying Turner directly to
the scene.
Prosecutors argued
Turner went the Hamilton Avenue home in June 2006 to rob
the family of seven and ended up killing them when one
of them confronted him with a gun.
Turner opted for a
bench trial in exchange for prosecutors dropping the
death penalty, something the victims family went back
and forth on.
"Even though he's
found guilty, me personally, I'll pray for him," said
Maria Flores, a relative of the victims. "He chose to do
what he did, but I'm not like him."
Emotions ran high
for all of the families involved. Flores showed sympathy
for Turner's mother.
"I feel bad for
his mom. I know she lost a son too," said Flores.
"We all think that
Desmond Turner deserves to die for what he did," said
Marion County Prosecutor Carl Brizzi. "There's no
question about that. We said it three and a half years
ago. We'll say it again today. But I can tell you with
100 percent certainty that if we were going for the
death penalty in this case we would not get it."
Maria Flores added,
"We don't agree with the death penalty because we don't
have the right to take a life. And we're not like him.
Most definitely....Killing him won't bring our family
back, okay? It just won't. It won't ease the pain."
Turner's
codefendant James Stewart goes on trial in December.
The
Hamilton Avenue murders is the
colloquial name for the mass murder of
seven people in a house at 560 North
Hamilton Avenue in Indianapolis,
Indiana, on June 1, 2006.
According to the
television program America's Most
Wanted, Indianapolis police
responded to a 911 call just after 10:00
p.m. They found seven dead victims on
main floor, three of which were children
aged 11 and under. The victims were shot
with a military-style weapon, police
charged.
Witnesses said that
two suspects were seen entering the
house shortly before the murders were
believed to have taken place. Flora
Alderran arrived with a friend to pick
up her son around 10:00 p.m. Her cousin
Magno also arrived about the same time.
Both noticed that the house lights were
out, which they knew was odd. When Flora
enterred, witnesses said she started
screaming and yelled to her friend not
to come in. The two suspects were seen
leaving through the front door moments
later.
Police identified the
suspects as James Stewart and Desmond
Turner. Stewart was caught the following
day and arrested without incident.
Turner, who had finished a four-year
stint in prison only weeks before, was
the subject of a widespread manhunt by
local, state and federal authorities. He
was captured on June 3, two days after
the murders, when he turned himself in
without incident at a Hardee's
restaurant on Indianapolis's east side.
Both suspects
maintain their innocence, but Stewart's
girlfriend has claimed that he had
admitted his role in the shootings.
Desmond Turner was
convicted of 7 counts of felony murder,
7 counts of criminal confinement,
burglary, and robbery; he was sentenced
to life imprisonment without parole plus
88 years on November 20, 2009. James
Stewart was convicted of 7 counts of
felony murder, 6 counts of criminal
confinement, robbery, burglary, carrying
a handgun without a license, and found
him to be a habitual offender; he was
sentenced to 425 years in prison on
January 6, 2010. Both men have promised
to appeal.
The house on 560 North Hamilton Ave.
was set on fire 2 years later in an arson attack on
August 23, 2008.
On March 31, 2010 Indianapolis
announced that the home on Hamilton Avenue will be
demolished in the next 60 days. As promised, the house
was demolished the morning of July 16, 2010.
Victims
Emma Valdez, 46
Alberto
Covarrubias, 56, Valdez's husband
Flora Alderran,
22, Valdez's daughter
Magno Aldarran,
29, Flora Alderran's husband
Luis Aldarran, 5,
Flora Alderran's son
David Covarrubias,
8
Alberto
Covarrubias, 11
Wikipedia.org
Assault rifles turned on family during
robbery
Friday, June 2, 2006
Indianapolis police are searching for
Desmond Turner, who is a suspect in the killing of seven
people.
A family of seven shot to death in
Indianapolis home
INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana (CNN) -- Police
were hunting suspects Friday in the slayings of seven
extended family members, including three children,
gunned down with assault rifles in a crime authorities
called Indianapolis' worst in decades.
Authorities have identified one suspect,
28-year-old Desmond Turner, and said they believe
there is at least one more.
"He'd gone there to rob the home and
decided while he was there to execute everybody at the
same time, unfortunately," Sgt. Matthew Mount, a police
spokesman, told The Associated Press.
Witnesses told police they saw as many as
three or four men running from the back of the home, AP
reported.
Police appealed to anyone who might have
known the victims or the suspect to contact them.
"This incident has shocked our police
department and shocked our city," said Indianapolis
Police Chief Michael Spears. "We do not have these kinds
of crimes." (Watch details of a crime that may be the
worst-ever in Indianapolis -- 1:18)
"We haven't seen anything like this in
Indianapolis in recent memory," Deputy Mayor Steve
Campbell told AP. "The I.P.D. [Indianapolis Police
Department] folks are saying you have to go back 20, 30
years to find anything like this."
The victims, found by officers responding
to a call of shots fired about 10:15 p.m. Thursday,
included four adults and three children, all Hispanic.
Police identified the adult victims as
Emma Valdez, 46; her husband, Alberto Covarrubias, 56;
Flora Albarran, 22, Valdez's daughter; and Magno
Albarran, 29, Flora's husband. The children were
identified as Luis Albarran, 5, Flora Albarran's son;
Alberto Covarrubias, 11, and David Covarrubias, 8.
The children were found shot to death in
the same bed, Deputy Police Chief Tim Foley said. He
said police do not know if the children were sleeping
there or hiding.
"It was a home invasion ... everyone in
the residence was dead," Foley said, displaying pictures
of some of the victims.
All the victims appeared to have been
shot with assault rifles, he said, and shell casings
were found at the scene.
The home was not a "trouble spot," Foley
said. Police had only been called there once in recent
history, on an alarm check. He said police do not think
the killings were gang-related.
Neighbors said the area had declined in
recent years and that drug crimes and muggings had
become common, according to an AP report.
A police news release gave this account
of the night's events, according to AP:
Flora Albarran had been running errands
with a friend before stopping at the house to pick up
her son, Luis, about 10 p.m. The boy had spent the
evening with his grandmother, Emma Valdez, and other
relatives.
When Albarran walked into the home, her
friend, who was waiting in the car, saw a light come on
and heard Albarran shout: "Don't do that! My child!"
She yelled to her friend not to come in
the house. That's when the friend heard gunshots inside
and Albarran screaming.
A man holding a long gun stepped on the
porch, and the shootings continued inside, the friend
told police.
Earlier, police spokesman Sgt. Steve
Staletovich said officers on the scene "found a young
woman crying that her mother had been shot."
The gunman or gunmen are thought to have
entered the home from the front and left the same way,
Foley said. Police do not believe they were injured.
The victims were from Mexico but were
believed to have been in the United States for at least
10 years, Mount said.
"I didn't know that they were even
arguing with anybody," Dodson said. "They go to work
every day. They're good people. I just -- I don't see
it."
Turner, of Indianapolis, has an extensive
criminal history, including convictions for firearm and
drug offenses, as well as resisting law enforcement,
Mount said. He served about two years in prison for a
1997 conviction and two more for a 2001 conviction.
Authorities believe Turner is still in
the area. "We're hoping he's probably lying low right
now," Foley said.
Asked if police consider Turner armed and
dangerous, Foley said, "Anyone who has killed seven
human beings, I consider dangerous."
Turner is believed to have grown up in
the same neighborhood where the killings took place,
according to CNN affiliate WXIN.
Police described him as about 5 feet 9
inches tall, about 150 pounds, with hazel eyes, a beard
with long sideburns and gold teeth.
Spears described Turner as "a very
desperate person," and said, "Someone knows where this
man is, and we want to know."
Police thwarted in search for suspect in
family's slaying
Saturday, June 3, 2006
INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana (CNN) --
Indianapolis police came up empty Friday night after
surrounding a house where they suspected the primary
suspect in the slayings of seven people was holed up, a
police spokesman said.
SWAT teams cleared the house without
finding anyone, police said.
Police have captured one man who they
believe was an accomplice to 28-year-old Desmond Turner,
the suspect thought to be inside the home Friday on
Indianapolis' east side, said Sgt. Matthew Mount.
The home is about 2 miles from the site
of Thursday's killings.
Police continued hunting for suspects in
the slayings of seven extended family members, including
three children, gunned down with assault rifles.
Authorities are calling it Indianapolis' worst crime in
decades.
"He'd gone there to rob the home and
decided while he was there to execute everybody at the
same time, unfortunately," Mount told The Associated
Press.
Witnesses told police they saw as many as
three or four men running from the back of the home, AP
reported.
Police appealed to anyone who might have
known the victims or the suspect to contact them.
"This incident has shocked our police
department and shocked our city," said Indianapolis
Police Chief Michael Spears. "We do not have these kinds
of crimes."
"We haven't seen anything like this in
Indianapolis in recent memory," Deputy Mayor Steve
Campbell told AP. "The (Indianapolis Police Department)
folks are saying you have to go back 20, 30 years to
find anything like this."
The victims, found by officers responding
to a call of shots fired about 10:15 p.m. Thursday,
included four adults and three children, all Hispanic.
Police identified the adult victims as
Emma Valdez, 46; her husband, Alberto Covarrubias, 56;
Flora Albarran, 22, Valdez's daughter; and Magno
Albarran, 29, Flora's husband. The children were
identified as Luis Albarran, 5, Flora Albarran's son;
Alberto Covarrubias, 11, and David Covarrubias, 8 or 9.
The children were found shot to death in
the same bed, Deputy Police Chief Tim Foley said. He
said police do not know if the children were sleeping
there or hiding.
"It was a home invasion," Foley said,
displaying pictures of some of the victims. "Everyone in
the residence was dead."
All the victims appeared to have been
shot with assault rifles, he said, and shell casings
were found at the scene.
The home was not a "trouble spot," Foley
said. Police had been called there only once in recent
history, on an alarm check. He said police do not think
the killings were gang-related.
Neighbors said the area had declined in
recent years and that drug crimes and muggings had
become common, according to an AP report.
A police news release gave this account
of the night's events, according to AP:
·
Flora Albarran had been running errands with a friend
before stopping at the house to pick up her son, Luis,
about 10 p.m. The boy had spent the evening with his
grandmother, Emma Valdez, and other relatives.
·
When Albarran walked into the home, her friend, who was
waiting in the car, saw a light come on and heard
Albarran shout: "Don't do that! My child!"
·
She yelled to her friend not to come in the house.
That's when the friend heard gunshots inside and
Albarran screaming.
·
A man holding a long gun stepped on the porch, and the
shootings continued inside, the friend told police.
Earlier, police spokesman Sgt. Steve
Staletovich said officers on the scene "found a young
woman crying that her mother had been shot."
The gunman or gunmen are thought to have
entered the home from the front and left the same way,
Foley said. Police do not believe they were injured.
The victims were from Mexico but were
believed to have been in the United States for at least
10 years, Mount said.
"I didn't know that they were even
arguing with anybody," Dodson said. "They go to work
every day. They're good people. I just -- I don't see
it."
Turner, of Indianapolis, has an extensive
criminal history, including convictions for firearm and
drug offenses, as well as resisting law enforcement,
Mount said. He served about two years in prison for a
1997 conviction and two more for a 2001 conviction.
Authorities believe Turner is still in
the area. "We're hoping he's probably lying low right
now," Foley said.
Asked if police consider Turner armed and
dangerous, Foley said, "Anyone who has killed seven
human beings, I consider dangerous."
Turner is believed to have grown up in
the same neighborhood where the killings took place,
police said.
Police described him as about
5-feet-9-inches tall, about 150 pounds, with hazel eyes,
a beard with long sideburns and gold teeth.
Spears described Turner as "a very
desperate person," and said, "Someone knows where this
man is, and we want to know."
Desmond Turner, Accused of Killing 7,
Turns Self In After Police Search
Indianapolis Slay Suspect Surrenders
INDIANAPOLIS, June
3, 2006
(AP) A man
suspected of gunning down seven family members he
believed kept large amounts of money in their home
surrendered to police on Saturday, Deputy Chief Tim
Foley said.
A few members of
Desmond Turner's family accompanied him as he met
authorities at a downtown fast-food restaurant around 7
p.m., Foley said.
“He couldn't
look at anybody,” Foley said. “He had his head down. He
was sullen.”
The bodies of
three boys, ages 5 to 11, and four adult relatives were
found dead in a house Thursday in the worst mass murder
in Indianapolis in at least 25 years.
Turner, 28, grew
up near the shooting and had returned last fall after
being released from prison following a 3½-year term for
drug and weapons charges.
Foley said
investigators put pressure on people who knew Turner to
ensure that they wouldn't take him in.
“He didn't turn
himself in out of remorse. He turned himself in because
he had no place to go,” Foley said.
More than 100
police officers searched for Turner, including
unsuccessful raids at two houses, since shortly after
the slayings. He now faces seven counts of murder.
On Friday,
police arrested the second suspected triggerman, 30-year-old
James Stewart, after a traffic stop. He was being held
Saturday on a preliminary charge of murder, police said.
“Indianapolis
can sleep a lot easier tonight,” Deputy Police Chief
Clifford Myers.
Foley said
police believe the suspects targeted the home for
robbery after hearing exaggerated accounts of money and
other valuables inside. Those accounts were “fiction,”
Foley said.
Nearly 30 shell
casings from an assault rifle were found at the home.
Foley said that
although the decision of whether to pursue capital
murder charges belongs to prosecutors, “If I was a
betting man, I'd say there's a high likelihood this is
going to be a death penalty case.”
Mourners laid
flowers and handmade memorials along the fence of the
modest home where the family was found slain in the
working-class neighborhood.
The victims were
identified as Emma Valdez, 46; her husband, Alberto
Covarrubias, 56; their sons Alberto Covarrubias, 11, and
David Covarrubias, 8 or 9; Valdez's daughter, Flora
Albarran, 22; Albarran's 5-year-old son, Luis; and
Albarran's brother Magno Albarran, 29.
Maria Flores,
whose sister was killed, stood quietly as police briefed
the media about Turner's surrender.
“We are very
relieved and thankful that he made the right decision,”
she said. “I just hope God forgives him for what he did.”
Neighbors,
friends and others whose emotions were touched by the
city's worst mass murder in 25 years left flowers,
ribbons, candles, dozens of stuffed animals and an angel
statue along a sidewalk out front of the family's house.
Cars drove by slowly while people knelt to pray. A
memorial service was scheduled to be held in front of
the family's home Sunday evening.
“God shall bring
justice to them, celebrate the way they lived, not the
way they left us,” read one note left atop seven red
roses at family's modest tan house. “A good family is
gone, but not forgotten. Shall they all rest in peace.”
Adults and
children, many in tears, streamed through nearby Thomas
D. Gregg Elementary, where David and Alberto had
attended classes, to speak with grief counselors
Saturday.
“The boys were
very respectful of the school, good students and well-behaved,”
Principal Les Durbin told The Indianapolis Star. “They
were very well-respected by their classmates and their
parents were very involved in their educations.”