LIST: 20 Tyler cold homicide cases police are still trying to solve
A cold case refers to crime that is typically violent (such as murder or rape) and has not been solved completely and hasn't been the subject of a recent criminal investigation.
LIST: East Texas cold homicide cases Texas Rangers are still trying to solve
Sometimes disappearances can also be considered cold cases if the victim hasn't been heard from for a longer period of time. To learn more about Tyler missing person cold cases, click the links below of previous articles KETK has done:
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'The Tyler Police Department's mission is to seek justice for all of those victims that have become silent,' Tyler PD said. 'We need your assistance in solving these unsolved homicide and missing person cold cases.'
KETK news has compiled a list of unsolved homicide cases in Tyler that the police department has been working on to bring justice to the victims and closure for their families.
According to Tyler Police Department, on June 13, 1987 an unknown suspect entered into 77-year-old Clarine Jones' home on S Kennedy Street where they stabbed her multiple times, sexually assaulted her and left her for dead.
Officials said on Oct. 7, 1987 a visiting nurse went to 300 S. Lyons to give care to a patient and found 62-year-old Mary Hooper and 57-year-old Emmett Lynch murdered inside their home.
Tyler PD said that on Aug. 29, 1988, witnesses told police that a 'rolling gun battle' had happened in the 300 block of East Queen Street. The people reported two rounds were fired from a vehicle and entered a trailer home that was parked in the front of 313 East Queen.
79-year-old Versie Daniels was hit by one of those stray rounds and died. Officials said a witness reported that numerous Hispanic men were involved in the gun battle.
On April 29, 1989 Tyler police responded to a report on East Berta Street that a man was lying motionless in the doorway of his garage apartment.
'The victim was found deceased and evidence determined that it was a homicide,' the department said. 'The victim was identified as Fulton Honeycutt, age 56.'
Police believe that a struggle happened inside the apartment before his death.
On Sept. 30, 1989 Tyler police found a body inside a burned taxi company car that was identified as Earl Ashfield, who was working as a driver for the taxi company.
Earlier that morning, Ashfield was reported missing along with the company car by the owner of the taxi company, officials said.
Tyler PD said on April 16, 1991 53-year-old Donald Thedford's body was found in an abandoned tin building located at 916 East Oakwood Street.
'Evidence at the scene indicated that Thedford was murdered,' officials said. 'Thedford was known for riding his black 10-speed bicycle in the neighborhood.'
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On May 30, 1992 Kenneth Jones and a friend were sitting in their vehicle in front of his home located at 1100 W Queen Street when they heard several gunshots in the area and stepped out of the vehicle.
According to Tyler PD, when Jones got out of the passenger side he was shot in the chest and later died at a local hospital from the gunshot wound.
Baltazar Lopez was attending a Christmas party at 117 S Horace Street on Dec. 25, 1992 when a disturbance happened around 3 a.m. inside the home that ended up in front of the home with gunfire, Tyler PD said.
'Two victims had been shot by a Hispanic male who was seen running from the crime scene,' officials said. 'Lopez died at he scene.'
On Jan. 4, 1994 officers found 56-year-old Will Harold shot to death inside his home at 2518 Franchel. Officials said that police believe that a disturbance broke out inside the home that ended in gunfire.
Tyler PD said that around 12: 40 a.m. on July 14, 1994 officers responded to the corner market located at Lake Placid Road and Old Jacksonville Highway where they found a man identified as 35-year-old Curtis Moore slumped over the steering wheel of a Chevy pickup.
After investigating further, officers discovered Moore had died from a gunshot wound.
Officials said on Aug. 25, 1994 officers responded to a report of a resident found shot in his house on 1110 W Third Street. The victim was identified as 36-year-old Carl Yarborough who was found dead from a gunshot wound.
According to to Tyler PD, several black men were seen running from the house after gunfire was heard by neighbors and getting into a white pickup and white four door Nissan Altima.
Tyler police officers responded to a traffic accident on Dec. 23, 1996 in the 1200 block of N Pabst Street where a vehicle driven by Larry King had struck a parked vehicle and then ran into a house.
'Upon further investigation officers discovered that King had been shot in the head while driving down the street,' officials said. 'King was transported to a local hospital and died from his injuries.'
Tyler PD said it is unknown who fired the weapon that killed King.
Officials said on July 15, 1997 a neighbor found 21-year-old Tamika Osborn dead in her home located at 1113 S Francis in the Butler College area.
'Investigators believe that the cause of dead to Osburn was asphyxiation,' Tyler PD said.
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17-year-old Oscar Cocolan was standing out in his driveway talking a friend around 3:30 a.m. on Sept. 20, 1998 when a four-door vehicle with tinted windows drove by very slowly with several Hispanic men inside, officials said.
According to Tyler PD, shots were fired from the vehicle hitting Cocolan where he died on scene.
According to the department, on April 25, 2003 81-year-old Jesse Mobley was found dead in a two-story condemned building located at 816 West Queen Street.
'Mobley possibly visited a nearby pool hall before his death and might have been in an altercation with someone outside the pool hall,' officials said.
According to Tyler PD, on Oct. 16, 2003 several black men wearing dark hooded sweatshirts walked up to 1309 N Ross Street and knocked on the door of the apartment Harold Jones was visiting.
They say two suspects entered the home, pulled out handguns and shot Jones while he was sitting on the couch. Jones was taken to a local hospital where he later died.
Around 12 a.m. on July 13, 2005 Tyler police officers responded to a shooting at Wayne's Car Wash on 1120 W Bow Street. Officials said police found 66-year-old James Thompson and 58-year-old Cassius shot inside the business.
Both men were taken to a local hospital but later died from their gunshot wounds.
According to Tyler PD, on March 17 37-year-old Jearald Little was found dead inside his home with a gunshot wound.
'Their were no signs of forced entry into the residence and it is believed that Little knew his assailant,' officials said.
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Officials said Felcia Mosley and Pedro Flores were found shot to dead at home located at 909 E Line street around 3:30 a.m. on Sept. 11, 2010.
'Investigators have followed up on numerous leads and need your help with the key piece of information to break this case,' Tyler PD explained.
Tyler Fire Department responded to a fully engulfed house fire on 4516 Edinburgh Street on Feb. 24, 2011 and found 28-year-old Harold Miller dead inside the home.
Officials said that investigators know that a struggle happened inside the home where Miller had been stabbed and shot before the house caught on fire.
If anyone has any information about these homicides they are encouraged to contact the Tyler Police Department at 903-531-1000 or Tyler Smith County Crime Stoppers at 903-597-2833.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Los Angeles Times
8 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
Irvine man charged with hate crimes against Latino men, accused of racial slurs and throwing hot coffee
An Irvine man was charged with hate crimes against Latino men after he was videotaped allegedly hurling racial slurs and throwing hot coffee on one man and punching an elderly man. Robert Tackett, a 54-year-old Irvine resident, was charged with felony assault with a deadly weapon other than a firearm, a felony count of violation of civil rights, a felony count of assault with force likely to produce great bodily injury and a felony count of inflicting injury on an elder adult, according to an Orange County District Attorney's Office news release. If convicted, he faces a maximum sentence of eight years in state prison, officials said. He is being held on $500,000 bail at the Orange County Jail. According to the release, Tackett had a 'negative interaction with the driver of a garbage truck' and the incident was filmed by another driver. Tackett allegedly followed the driver who filmed him, tried to run him off the road and slam into his vehicle, and yelled 'anti-Hispanic racial slurs.' Tackett allegedly tried twice to crash into the driver's vehicle and threw a hot cup of coffee onto the car and driver, authorities said. The driver didn't call police but was identified after he posted the video on social media. In a video obtained by KTLA5, a man later identified as Tackett was seen driving a white work van and swerving into the lane of the driver, who was taking the video. In a second incident around 5:30 p.m. on the same day, Tackett is accused of getting out of his van after stopping at a stoplight in Westminster and punching a 72-year-old driver through the window of his pickup truck 'while yelling profanity and anti-Hispanic slurs,' authorities said. Another driver recorded the alleged attack and called the Irvine Police Department after seeing the video of the first attack on social media, officials said. Tackett was arrested by California Highway Patrol on July 24 in Mammoth, officials said. 'Hate is a venom that poisons everything — and everyone — it touches. An attack motivated by hate is not an attack on just a single individual; it is an attack on the very fabric of our society and our community as a whole,' said Orange County Dist. Atty. Todd Spitzer in the release. .

Los Angeles Times
12 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
Fewer Americans see discrimination as anti-DEI push gains traction, poll shows
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Since then, many of those companies have reversed themselves and retreated from their diversity practices, a trend that's accelerated this year under pressure from President Trump, a Republican who has sought to withhold federal money from schools and companies that promote DEI. Now, it's clear that views are changing as well as company policies. Claudine Brider, a 48-year-old Black Democrat in Compton, California, says the concept of DEI has made the workplace difficult for Black people and women in new ways. 'Anytime they're in a space that they're not expected to be, like seeing a Black girl in an engineering course ... they are seen as only getting there because of those factors,' Brider said. 'It's all negated by someone saying, 'You're only here to meet a quota.'' The poll finds 45% of U.S. adults think Black people face high levels of discrimination, down from 60% in the spring of 2021. There was a similar drop in views about the prevalence of serious discrimination against Asian people, which fell from 45% in the 2021 poll — conducted a month after the Atlanta spa shootings, which killed eight people, including six women of Asian descent — to 32% in the current survey. There's no question the country has backtracked from its 'so-called racial reckoning' and the experiences of particular groups such as Black people are being downplayed, said Phillipe Copeland, a professor at Boston University School of Social Work. Americans' views about discrimination haven't shifted when it comes to all groups, though. Just under half of U.S. adults, 44%, now say Hispanic people face at least 'quite a bit of discrimination,' and only 15% say this about white people. Both numbers are similar to when the question was last asked in April 2021. The poll indicates that less than half of Americans think DEI has a benefit for the people it's intended to help. About 4 in 10 U.S. adults say DEI reduces discrimination against Black people, while about one-third say this about Hispanic people, women and Asian people. Many — between 33% and 41% — don't think DEI makes a difference either way. About one-quarter of U.S. adults believe that DEI actually increases discrimination against these groups. Black and Hispanic people are more likely than white people to think DEI efforts end up increasing discrimination against people like them. About 4 in 10 Black adults and about one-third of Hispanic adults say DEI increases discrimination against Black people, compared with about one-quarter of white adults. There is a similar split between white adults and Black and Hispanic adults on assessments of discrimination against Hispanic people. Among white people, it's mostly Democrats who think DEI efforts reduce discrimination against Black and Hispanic people. Only about one-quarter of white independents and Republicans say the same. Pete Parra, a 59-year-old resident of Gilbert, Ariz., thinks that DEI is making things harder for racial minorities now. He worries about how his two adult Hispanic sons will be treated when they apply for work. 'I'm not saying automatically just give it to my sons,' said Parra, who leans toward the Democratic Party. But he's concerned that now factors other than merit may take priority. 'If they get passed over for something,' he said, 'they're not going to know (why).' The poll shows that Americans aren't any more likely to think white people face discrimination than they were in 2021. And more than half think DEI doesn't make a difference when it comes to white people or men. But a substantial minority — about 3 in 10 U.S. adults — think DEI increases discrimination against white people. Even more white adults, 39%, hold that view, compared with 21% of Hispanic adults and 13% of Black adults. The recent political focus on DEI has included the idea that white people are more often overlooked for career and educational opportunities because of their race. John Bartus, a 66-year-old registered Republican in Twin Falls, Idaho, says that DEI might have been 'a good thing for all races of people, but it seems like it's gone far left.' It's his impression that DEI compels companies to hire people based on their race or if they identify as LGBTQ+. 'The most qualified person ought to get a job based on their merit or based on their educational status,' Bartus said. Brider, the Black California resident, objects to the notion that white people face the same level of discrimination as Black people. But while she thinks the aims of DEI are admirable, she also sees the reality as flawed. 'I do think there needs to be something that ensures that there is a good cross-section of people in the workplace,' Brider said. 'I just don't know what that would look like, to be honest.' Tang and Thomson-Deveaux write for the Associated Press. The AP-NORC poll of 1,437 adults was conducted July 10-14, using a sample drawn from NORC's probability-based AmeriSpeak Panel, which is designed to be representative of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for adults overall is plus or minus 3.6 percentage points.


USA Today
12 hours ago
- USA Today
Deportations are taking a toll on California's economy - and have only just begun
ICE raids and mass deportations could cost California $275 billion in lost wages and other funds, a report finds. Lupe Lopez can't help but notice that business and foot traffic are painfully slow these days in the predominantly Hispanic neighborhood of East San Jose, California. "A lot more people are either staying closer to home or not coming out at all," said Lopez, 69, whose family owns nine Arteagas Food Center supermarkets, one of which is in East San Jose. Young people are buying in bulk, she said, because their parents are afraid of being outside, where they might be picked up by immigration agents. "We're seeing a change in shopping habits," said Lopez, co-founder of Avanzando, a nonprofit helping Latinos make advances through education. Even as the Trump administration prepares to ramp up its immigration enforcement nationwide, the focus so far in California has already hurt local economies, research and anecdotal reports suggest. One recent study estimated that the hit to California, the world's fourth-largest economy, could be as much as $275 billion. "It's a pretty massive amount that even took us by surprise," said Bay Area Council Economic Institute Research Director Abby Raisz, author of the nonprofit's June report. "We anticipated it would be big, but we didn't realize how expansive and significant a role undocumented workers play in sustaining California's economy. It's bigger than we thought." Immigration raids led to drop in California's workforce Since the report's release, the Trump administration has expanded immigration raids to include many more people without criminal records. The Department of Homeland Security said nearly 2,800 undocumented immigrants have been arrested in Greater Los Angeles. Local media reported that many were between June 6 and 22. The raids had a dramatic and immediate impact on the workforce. Almost 465,000 California workers fled from the labor ranks during the week of June 8, as immigration authorities raided worksites across the Los Angeles area, according to a July University of California, Merced study. As a result, people working in private-sector jobs in California dropped by 3.1%, a decline not seen since the COVID-19 pandemic, the study noted, though it's unclear whether they left permanently or just for a short time. California Lieutenant Governor Eleni Kounalakis said immigrants are the backbone of the state's economic workforce. "They are the workers who feed us, the caretakers who support us, the entrepreneurs who drive innovation, and the neighbors who strengthen our communities," Kounalakis said in a statement. "The ripple effects of mass deportation in California would be felt nationwide and beyond." "Carry your papers": The Trump administration is telling immigrants 'Carry your papers.' Here's what to know. Report: Undocumented workers' imprint cannot be underestimated Of California's 10.6 million immigrants, 2.3 million are undocumented, according to Pew Research Center. They account for 8% of all workers statewide. Undocumented immigrants are more likely to be in the workforce than Californians born in the United States, Bay Area Council's Raisz said, with 72% of undocumented immigrants participating in the workforce compared to about 67% of native-born. Immigrants are widespread, but concentrated in certain fields and geographic areas. More than 60% of California's agricultural workers are immigrants and almost 26% are undocumented; about 41% of the state's construction workers are immigrants and 14% are undocumented, Raisz' report found. Those workers are concentrated in coastal urban areas in the Bay Area and Greater Los Angeles, as well as in agricultural hubs in the Central Valley. "These regions are critical drivers of California's economy and understanding the potential impact of deportation on local, state, and national economies has never been more critical," the report said. And even these high figures are probably an undercount, said Darlene Tenes, the executive director of Farmworker Caravan, a San Jose-based nonprofit assisting area farmworkers with some basic needs. "It's very, very difficult to document the undocumented. They are very much a shadow community," Tenes told USA TODAY. "I think it's hard to put a number on it. You have to understand, almost every industry in California uses undocumented workers." Crossroads: Farmers are facing a fork on Trump's immigration highway. So what's next? Undocumented workers' impact on agriculture, construction Raisz said her report shows how entrenched undocumented immigrants are in California and how much they contribute to their communities. "About two-thirds of them have lived here for more than a decade, and about a third own their own homes, so they pay both income and property taxes," Raisz said. Without undocumented labor, GDP generated by California's agriculture would decline by 14%, Raisz said, and the state's construction industry would see a 16% decrease. Both sectors were already experiencing labor shortages, he said, which will only be compounded by immigration crackdowns. Tenes said Americans and some parts of the world won't have access to fresh fruits and vegetables without undocumented workers, as California's coastal counties and Central Valley are consistently among the largest agricultural producers in the nation. 'Cost burdened': America's housing is pulling further out of reach, report finds "Without (undocumented workers), we don't eat, period," Tenes said. "Everything that you eat from a grocery store, strawberries, grapes, lettuce, bread, cereal, all came from the ground at some point. Guess who picks them?" About half of the nation's 4.3 million construction workers are Hispanic and as many as 1 million of them are undocumented, according to George Carillo, CEO of the Hispanic Construction Council. Thousands of those workers are in California and will be needed as the nation faces a housing shortage of around 4.5 million homes and Los Angeles recovers from this year's deadly wildfires, Carillo said. "Who do you think is going to help rebuild those homes that were lost?" Carillo said.