Murders!

BRF Senior Member
11,621 posts 107 reps Joined Nov 2009
Sun, Apr 26, 2020 2:33 PM

Just to be clear, I’ve always believed OJ was guilty and I’m glad to see so many others on here feel the same way. 
 

I find that trial to be one of the most interesting in US history. 

Dr Winston O'Boogie Senior Member
3,345 posts 35 reps Joined Oct 2010
Sun, Apr 26, 2020 2:40 PM
posted by BRF

Just to be clear, I’ve always believed OJ was guilty and I’m glad to see so many others on here feel the same way. 
 

I find that trial one of the most interesting in US history. 

OJ is still on the search for the "real  killers".

Zunardo Senior Member
815 posts 15 reps Joined Nov 2010
Sun, Apr 26, 2020 7:30 PM

1.  Columbus/Upper Arlington, June 1980 - Asenath Dukat, age 8.  Bludgeoned, strangled, and raped while coming home from school.  Body found near home within hours. A suspect on a bicycle was described but never identified.  No arrests ever made. Brazen daylight crime.  Horrifying to think the guy got away with it easily.

These two bug me also:

Columbus, late 1981  - Jean Shrader, mid-20's, strangled in downtown parking garage.  I was working a few blocks away at the time.  Husband was prime suspect, but nobody was ever charged with the crime.  However, in a precursor to O.J., her parents sued the husband, and a jury rendered a civil decision that the husband probably killed her.   NOTE:  the husband did serve time for perjuring himself in the civil trial.  

Chicago, Oct 2018.  Kierra Coles, age 27, USPS letter carrier.  Called in sick, left house on foot, never seen again.  Was recently pregnant by a married man who also had another pregnant girlfriend. My money's on the guy's wife and/or other girlfriend.

sportchampps Senior Member
7,527 posts 36 reps Joined Nov 2009
Mon, Apr 27, 2020 12:10 AM
posted by Fab4Runner

Inspired by a tweet I saw:

If you could have the answer to one unsolved murder, which would you choose? It's Hae Min Lee for me. Not technically unsolved, but I have questions!

His trial didn’t seem fair but the podcast serial left out a lot of information that pointed to him being guilty. If I was o. The jury I would have found him guilty but if I was a judge I think his case has merit for a retrial 

OSH Kosh B'Gosh
4,424 posts 18 reps Joined Nov 2009
Mon, Apr 27, 2020 12:14 PM

What a great thread. One of the few things I watch on tv/stream are murder mysteries. So many good ones, I do think The Zodiac is at the top for me.

iclfan2 Reppin' the 330/216/843
9,465 posts 98 reps Joined Nov 2009
Mon, Apr 27, 2020 12:17 PM

Any of you listen to the "Crime Junkies" podcast? Pretty solid

Dr Winston O'Boogie Senior Member
3,345 posts 35 reps Joined Oct 2010
Mon, Apr 27, 2020 12:18 PM
posted by Zunardo

1.  Columbus/Upper Arlington, June 1980 - Asenath Dukat, age 8.  Bludgeoned, strangled, and raped while coming home from school.  Body found near home within hours. A suspect on a bicycle was described but never identified.  No arrests ever made. Brazen daylight crime.  Horrifying to think the guy got away with it easily.

 

Man, remember that one vividly.  When I was little, I used to go to the Dukat's house for Mrs. Dukat to babysit.  I don't remember Asenath (she was called Seanie), but I remember that summer.  I was 10 years old and lived a short distance from there.  I just started my Columbus Citizen-Journal paper route and I used to be paranoid as crap that the murderer was out there in the darkness some mornings.  Then all of those "Safety Spot" signs started going up in windows.  

A really sad and terrible story.  I think about that family once in awhile and cannot imagine a loss like that.  

sportchampps Senior Member
7,527 posts 36 reps Joined Nov 2009
Mon, Apr 27, 2020 11:42 PM
posted by iclfan2

Any of you listen to the "Crime Junkies" podcast? Pretty solid

I do sometimes. I like True Crime Garage as well and they are from Columbus Ohio so they do a ton of cases focused on Ohio.

OSH Kosh B'Gosh
4,424 posts 18 reps Joined Nov 2009
Wed, Apr 29, 2020 3:17 PM
posted by SportsAndLady

First two episodes of The Confession Tapes on Netflix is the story of Sebastian Burns and Atif Rafay being charged in the murders for Rafay’s entire family. I don’t think there’s a single chance either of them did it, yet they’re sitting in a maximum security prison. 
Would like to know what really happened. That episode really creeped me out. 

Man...watched that last night. Good recommendation.

I'm now hooked on The Confession Tapes...

geeblock Member
1,123 posts 0 reps Joined May 2018
Wed, Apr 29, 2020 4:31 PM
posted by iclfan2

Any of you listen to the "Crime Junkies" podcast? Pretty solid

Good show 

Zunardo Senior Member
815 posts 15 reps Joined Nov 2010
Fri, Aug 12, 2022 3:17 PM
posted by Dr Winston O'Boogie
posted by Zunardo

1.  Columbus/Upper Arlington, June 1980 - Asenath Dukat, age 8.  Bludgeoned, strangled, and raped while coming home from school.  Body found near home within hours. A suspect on a bicycle was described but never identified.  No arrests ever made. Brazen daylight crime.  Horrifying to think the guy got away with it easily.

 

Man, remember that one vividly.  When I was little, I used to go to the Dukat's house for Mrs. Dukat to babysit.  I don't remember Asenath (she was called Seanie), but I remember that summer.  I was 10 years old and lived a short distance from there.  I just started my Columbus Citizen-Journal paper route and I used to be paranoid as crap that the murderer was out there in the darkness some mornings.  Then all of those "Safety Spot" signs started going up in windows.  

A really sad and terrible story.  I think about that family once in awhile and cannot imagine a loss like that.  

Dr, did you see yesterday's breakthrough on the 1980 Asenath Dukat case?  UA police said they finally matched DNA from the crime scene to a Brent Strutner, who graduated from UA the year before and grew up in the area.   

Apparently Strutner had quite a few mental and drug issues.  Lots of run-ins with police all over the county and the state.  Committed suicide four years after the murder, so detectives are closing the case as solved.

Lots of interesting info in this link on what the police had on him as a suspect - interviews, eyewitness accounts, etc.  Nothing to qualify for an arrest, but in hindsight is very telling.

https://longwalkhomeua.com/the-first-suspect

QuakerOats Senior Member
11,701 posts 66 reps Joined Nov 2009
Fri, Aug 12, 2022 3:50 PM

Saw that story yesterday - good to know they never gave up on the case and believe it to be solved.  Can't imagine the horrific atrocity the child went through and the family has had to endure. 

Dr Winston O'Boogie Senior Member
3,345 posts 35 reps Joined Oct 2010
Fri, Aug 12, 2022 4:14 PM
posted by Zunardo

Dr, did you see yesterday's breakthrough on the 1980 Asenath Dukat case?  UA police said they finally matched DNA from the crime scene to a Brent Strutner, who graduated from UA the year before and grew up in the area.   

Apparently Strutner had quite a few mental and drug issues.  Lots of run-ins with police all over the county and the state.  Committed suicide four years after the murder, so detectives are closing the case as solved.

Lots of interesting info in this link on what the police had on him as a suspect - interviews, eyewitness accounts, etc.  Nothing to qualify for an arrest, but in hindsight is very telling.

https://longwalkhomeua.com/the-first-suspect

I had not seen this.  Thanks for posting.  I hope it is a tiny bit of peace for their family to at least have a name.  Wow.

sportchampps Senior Member
7,527 posts 36 reps Joined Nov 2009
Fri, Aug 12, 2022 4:33 PM
posted by Dr Winston O'Boogie

I had not seen this.  Thanks for posting.  I hope it is a tiny bit of peace for their family to at least have a name.  Wow.

Sounds like the family has known for years but UA police officially closed the case


Dr Winston O'Boogie Senior Member
3,345 posts 35 reps Joined Oct 2010
Fri, Aug 12, 2022 8:38 PM
posted by sportchampps

Sounds like the family has known for years but UA police officially closed the case


Yeah, I guess so.  Wonder why it took this long.


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