mercredi 12 mai 2010

Sabla Sentenced To Life Without Parole For Killing Wife And Encasing Body In Concrete:






A man from Lebanon found guilty of first-degree murder by a jury in April of killing his wife then encasing her in concrete will spend the rest of his life behind bars.

Really today's sentencing was just a formality for Horst Sabla, the automatic sentence for a first-degree murder conviction in Missouri is life without the possibility of parole.

Back in November of 2008 hunters stumbled across a black plastic tool box in the woods near Lebanon, not far from the RV Sharon and Horst Sabla shared after they lost their home to foreclosure.

Billy Blattell told jurors that he asked his father-in-law to help him move the box, but that it was too heavy. When they smelled a foul odor emitting from the container they Blattell called 911 and told his little boy to stay back.

Authorities had to use bolt cutters to open the box, which was wrapped in chains and locked, to open the container. What they found inside was disturbing, the body of a woman dressed in pajamas, that had been encased in several hundred pounds of concrete.

The "lady in the box" remained unidentified for almost a month and investigators were getting antsy in trying to determine who she was. At the time of the discovery Laclede County Sheriff Richard Wrinkle told me, "Someone loved this lady---she was well taken care of."
Sheriff Richard Wrinkle

Wrinkle appealed to the local and national media for help in identifying "the lady in the box." Their break came about a month later when a friend of Sharon Sabla's called authorities on December 8, 2008, who said he believed he knew who the victim might be. Armed with that information, investigators obtained a DNA sample from Sharon Sabla's daughter, Ginger Coffelt, which came back positive.

On December 10th, Sabla was arrested and read his miranda rights. At first he denied having any knowledge of what happened to his wife of 19 years, telling investigators that he had gone to the store and when he returned his wife and $32,000 were gone. Eventually he admitted to detectives that he shot his wife in the back of the head on August 9, 2008, then "folded" her body at the waist, stuffed her in the black plastic hinged tote toolbox and hid her rotting body in the garage of the family home. He masked the decomposition odor with lime before encasing her in concrete.

The Sabla's were under a tremendous amount of financial stress at the time of the murder, they had recently lost their home and were living in a travel trailer. Sabla, who is a native of Germany, told detectives that his wife was depressed, that they were both HIV positive (Sharon Sabla contracted the disease following a surgical procedure,) and that she said she would shoot herself if he didn't shoot her. He later told detectives that moving the box from his vehicle and pushing it downhill nearly killed him.

In testimony presented at trial on of the investigators said on the stand, "He admits shooting her---I always did what she told me to do,” he (Sabla) says. “... When somebody says I cold-blooded shot my wife, they need to talk to the people that know us.

Sabla, whose trial was moved to Camden County on a change of venue, was also convicted of armed criminal action in his wife's death. He was sentenced to 50 years for that charge, which will run consecutively (after the life without parole sentence.)

Preliminary Hearing Date Set For Alleged Teen Slasher:





A preliminary hearing date has been set for a Vernon County teenager accused of killing two of his friends.

Matthew Garrett Mason appeared in court today for a pre-trial conference where a judge scheduled the next step in the case, the prelim at 9 a.m. on August 12th.

The probable cause statement does not include a motive or indicate what may have led up to the fatal knife attack of 14 year-old Kylie Leyva (l.) and 18 year-old Anne "Annie" Reed last month.


A preliminary hearing is where prosecutors have to lay out the basis for their case and a judge determines whether or not the state has enough evidence for the case to proceed to trial.

Lawyers for Mason can do one of two things:

  • They can waive (concede that prosecutors have enough evidence to take their client to trial)


  • They can let the state lay out their evidence and let the judge decide whether the case is bound over to Circuit Court.

The state does not have to share any of their evidence with defense attorneys prior to a preliminary hearing. Some prosecutors do, some don't.

The probable cause statement in this case is very vague. Defense attorneys probably want it to stay that way as to not taint a potential jury pool so they will probably waive the preliminary hearing.

If the case is bound over for court.....defense attorney's will likely request a change of venue for the trial.

Nixa Mayor Formally Charged With DWI "Regrets Poor Decision":







Christian County Prosecutor Ron Cleek formally charged Nixa mayor, Brian Hayes, with misdemeanor driving while intoxicated charges this afternoon.

Hayes was pulled over by a Nixa police officer about 1 a.m. on Sunday on Hwy. 160 on the south side of the city. Police chief James Bacon said officers contacted him at home and informed him they had contacted the Missouri Highway Patrol for assistance in Hayes' arrest, to avoid a conflict of interest.
Hayes was released to a sober driver after he was booked into the Christian County jail.

Hayes issued a news release at the same time that formal charges were being filed against him. In the statement he says, "I regret the embarrassment and pain this has caused to the City of Nixa as well as my family and those close to me."

"I made a very poor decision to drive and put myself in this position. Due to my own poor decision I will be judged and scrutinized, all of which I deserve, but the City of Nixa does not."

Hayes is scheduled to be arraigned in Associate Circuit Court in Christian County on July 21st.


The following is the news release:

"Early Sunday morning I was stopped by the Nixa police and ticketed by the Missouri Highway Patrol for driving while intoxicated. I am deeply sorry and regret the embarrassment and pain this has caused to the City of Nixa as well as my family and those close to me.

"I made a very poor decision to drive and put myself in this position. Due to my own poor decision I will be judged and scrutinized, all of which I deserve, but the City of Nixa does not.

"My biggest regret is the harm this will cause to the City of Nixa, a community I love and have served for almost ten years. I know that with all of the recent stories and pain that we have been through as a community, this could not have happened at a worse time.

"I want to comment the Nixa Police Department for handling a tough situation in a professional manner. They followed the proper procedure and protocol to ensure no partiality or preferential treatment was given to me or my position as mayor.

"What I regret and am sorry for the most is that this incident will shine a light on one man's poor decision and not the positive aspects of our community. At a time when we should be focused on keeping our economy alive, regaining our construction industry, promoting retail growth, and many other community issues, we will be focused on my poor decision.

"I pray that we will stay focused on the issues that matter to the citizens the most. My term as mayor will be over in April; the important issues that we need to deal with will be there much longer than that.

"My hope is that something positive will come from this. I hope that people will see what I am going through and think twice about making the decision to drive. If my mistake keeps one person from getting behind the wheel and hurting someone or themselves, then my embarrassment and pain will have been worth it."

Joplin Woman Will Stand Trial For Allegedly Raping Two Teen-Aged Brothers:






A Joplin woman will go to trial on two counts of statutory rape for allegedly having sex with two teen aged brothers in January.

Crystal L. Pequignot, 21, was bound over for trial today on one count of first-degree statutory rape and one count of second-degree statutory.

The brothers — one now 15 year old, the other now 14 — testified at Pequignot’s preliminary hearing that they met the woman at a Walgreen's either late January 10th or in the early morning hours of January 11th (one of the brothers says that he knew her from church,) and went with her to her residence in Joplin.

After arriving at Pequignot’s home, the older brother, who was then 14, says that he and Pequignot went into her bedroom and had sex.

The older brother said that at the time of the alleged sexual assault his younger brother and a teen aged girl were in another room at a time. The younger sibling, who was then 13, testified that he went into the woman's bedroom after his older brother exited and had sex with the woman.

Pequignot is scheduled to be arraigned in Circuit Court on July 10th.

UPDATED: Felony Stealing Charge Dismissed Against Larry Covington:





State felony stealing charges filed against former Nixa Street Supervisor Larry Covington (a.) were dismissed today by Associate Circuit Court Judge John Waters.

Christian County prosecutor Ron Cleek says sheet metal, hammers, fasteners and various other items recovered from Covingtons Ash Grove property belonged to the city's public works department, Covingtons former employer, and had a combined value of over five hundred dollars.

Defense attorney Nancy Price argued that the state had inflated the prices of those items and had not itemized them individually.




Judge Waters ruled that the state had not met the burden of proof to send the case to trial that the items recovered were worth more than five hundred dollars, and he told prosecutors that they could not lump the items seized together to make a combined value of of $500.

Cleek (a.) says he will refile the case as soon as he gets an itemized list of items and their value from the Nixa Police Department.

This has no bearing on the federal charges (mail fraud, money laundering and embezzlement) against Covington, his wife Paula, and another former Nixa employee, David Griggs that allege that they stole over a million dollars from the City of Nixa.

Fringe Extremist---Timothy Thomas Combs' Spritual Advisor In Federal Custody;






A McDonald County man with a storied past has been arrested on Federal weapons charges.

Pastor Robert Neil Joos was arrested at his rural McDonald County farm according to a news release from Matt Whitworth, Acting United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri.

"According to an affidavit filed in support of the federal criminal complaint, today’s arrest arose from a federal investigation into a Feb. 26, 2004, bombing incident that injured the Director of Diversity & Dialogue for the city of Scottsdale, Ariz. The injured city official is a black male. The undercover investigation focused on several persons involved in white supremacist movements throughout the United States. In the course of the investigation, the affidavit says, undercover agents were told about a retreat location in Missouri that members of the movement utilized. Joos was identified as the owner of the property."

"A confidential informant and two undercover ATF agents visited Joos at his McDonald County property on three occasions in January 2008 and in January and February 2009. During those visits, the affidavit says, they observed several firearms and ammunition," according to the release.

This isn't Joos' first rodeo with authorities involving a hate crime. In 1994 authorities in McDonald County raided the Sacerdotal Order of the David Company and were stunned at what they found. Stockpiled inside the compoud were weapons, ammunition and dynamite. Joos, claimed the weapons were meant for trading.

Unfortunately for Joos, authorities didn't see it his way. Authorities say the religious leader forged an illegal court document and served it to a Missouri State Trooper. When authorities went to his McDonald County compound to arrest him, cops say he put up a fight and had to be maced. Joos was released from jail in April of 1997, but one member of his militant group vowed revenge---that man was Timothy Coombs.
Investigators say that on the evening of September 16, 1994, Timothy Coombs allegedly went to the home of the man who busted his friend and religious leader to seek revenge....that man was Missouri State Highway Patrol Trooper Bobbie Harper.

Harper, who was recovering from liver transplant surgery, was making a bowl of ice cream when he was shot sniper-style through the kitchen window of his McDonald County home by Coombs. The bullet ripped through his stomach and newly transplanted liver.

Although Trooper Harper didn't immediately die as a result of the gunshot wound, it was a contributing factor in his 1996 death following heart surgery.

Coombs is still on the run from the law to this day and there is a $100,000 reward for his capture. Recently he was named as the Ace of Spades in a deck of playing cards that the Missouri Highway Patrol began distributing to prison inmates last March that feature cold cases and wanted fugitives in Missouri.


COMPLETE NEWS RELEASE:


Matt J. Whitworth, Acting United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri, announced that a McDonald County, Mo., man was charged in federal court today with illegally possessing firearms following a search of his 200-acre property in southern Missouri.

Robert Neil Joos, 56, of McDonald County, was charged in a federal criminal complaint filed in the U.S. District Court in Springfield, Mo., on Wednesday, June 24, 2009, with being a felon in possession of firearms. Joos, who was arrested this morning, remains in federal custody pending a detention hearing on Monday, June 29, 2009.

According to an affidavit filed in support of the federal criminal complaint, today’s arrest arose from a federal investigation into a Feb. 26, 2004, bombing incident that injured the Director of Diversity & Dialogue for the city of Scottsdale, Ariz. The injured city official is a black male. The undercover investigation focused on several persons involved in white supremacist movements throughout the United States. In the course of the investigation, the affidavit says, undercover agents were told about a retreat location in Missouri that members of the movement utilized. Joos was identifi! ed as the owner of the property.

A confidential informant and two undercover ATF agents visited Joos at his McDonald County property on three occasions in January 2008 and in January and February 2009. During those visits, the affidavit says, they observed several firearms and ammunition. Under federal law, it is illegal for anyone who has been convicted of a felony to be in possession of any firearm or ammunition.

Joos has a 1997 felony conviction for unlawful use of a weapon and a 2004 felony conviction for operating a motor vehicle without a valid license.

Whitworth cautioned that the charge contained in this complaint is simply an accusation, and not evidence of guilt. Evidence supporting the charge must be presented to a federal trial jury, whose duty is to determine guilt or innocence.

Joplin School Shooter Pleads Guilty:

A Joplin teenager has pleaded guilty to firing an assault rifle in his middle school and threatening his principal.

Thomas White , who is now sixteen, was thirteen years-old and in the seventh grade at Memorial Middle School in October 2006 when he took an assault rifle to school and fired it into the ceiling. He then turned the gun on Principal Steve Gilbreth and pulled the trigger, but the gun jammed.

White, who was to be tried as an adult, entered the guilty plea today (06-26-09) to two counts of first-degree assault and one count of armed criminal action.

Earlier this year, a state psychiatrist found White mentally incompetent to assist in his defense, however in May a judge ordered a second evaluation.