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Suspect in Columbia infant death apparently released from custody
Suspect in Columbia infant death apparently released from custody

Yahoo

time21-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Suspect in Columbia infant death apparently released from custody

Mitchell Kaminski COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ) — A Fayette woman charged with second-degree murder in the 2021 death of an 8-month-old girl is the subject of an active arrest warrant. But two days after the warrant was issued, court and prison records indicate she still isn't in custody. Jennifer Johnson was scheduled to appear in court at 9 a.m. Monday, July 14 for charges including second-degree felony murder and first-degree endangering the welfare of a child. She is accused in the death of Hannah Kent. A Tuesday court filing shows that she was sent to the Arkansas Department of Corrections. However, Arkansas DOC spokesperson Rand Champion told ABC 17 News in an email that a Jennifer Johnson was put on parole on June 16 and no one with that name is in custody. The spokesperson said a middle name was not available in their system. According to the Missouri Department of Corrections, Johnson was released Monday. She had previously been incarcerated in Missouri from April 27-May 19, 2022, and again from May 23, 2022-June 16, 2025, despite the Boone County Jail having her listed on a no-bond hold. Boone County courts issued a warrant for her arrest on Tuesday. Prosecutor Roger Johnson declined to comment on Thursday. Court records list Johnson's address in the 2001 block of Holly Avenue. But when ABC 17 News visited the property, the home appeared abandoned, and the lot surrounding it was under construction. Columbia police arrested Johnson in April 2021, after being called to a home in the 1000 block of Elleta Boulevard in north Columbia. According to court documents, police were dispatched to the Women's and Children's Hospital in Columbia on the morning of April 18, 2021, where they were informed that an 8-month-old, Hannah Kent, who was under Johnson's care, had died. Court documents indicate the parents left Kent and other children in Johnson's care beginning around 5 p.m. the previous day. The mother found the child around 8:30 a.m. unresponsive and cool to the touch after returning home and immediately noticed bruising, court documents indicate. The parents then took the child to Women's and Children's Hospital, where the infant was pronounced dead at 8:45 am. Johnson allegedly told police that she last saw the infant alive at 2:15 a.m. after giving a bottle to the child, the probable cause statement says. According to court documents, Johnson took a call from the parents saying the baby had died and the parents wanted to see Johnson. Two people who knew Johnson brought items that Johnson had at the home to the Columbia police, court documents say. Investigators allegedly found baby formula on Johnson's clothes, and a swab of the same shirt tested positive for blood. Johnson was previously charged with two counts of assault in Howard County in 2019. The complaint in the case states she strangled and bit another woman. Kent's family declined to comment. DOC041921_04192021170840Download Click here to follow the original article.

Suspect in Columbia infant death apparently released from custody
Suspect in Columbia infant death apparently released from custody

Yahoo

time21-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Suspect in Columbia infant death apparently released from custody

Mitchell Kaminski COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ) — A Fayette woman charged with second-degree murder in the 2021 death of an 8-month-old girl is the subject of an active arrest warrant. But two days after the warrant was issued, court and prison records indicate she still isn't in custody. Jennifer Johnson was scheduled to appear in court at 9 a.m. Monday, July 14 for charges including second-degree felony murder and first-degree endangering the welfare of a child. She is accused in the death of Hannah Kent. A Tuesday court filing shows that she was sent to the Arkansas Department of Corrections. However, Arkansas DOC spokesperson Rand Champion told ABC 17 News in an email that a Jennifer Johnson was put on parole on June 16 and no one with that name is in custody. The spokesperson said a middle name was not available in their system. According to the Missouri Department of Corrections, Johnson was released Monday. She had previously been incarcerated in Missouri from April 27-May 19, 2022, and again from May 23, 2022-June 16, 2025, despite the Boone County Jail having her listed on a no-bond hold. Boone County courts issued a warrant for her arrest on Tuesday. Prosecutor Roger Johnson declined to comment on Thursday. Court records list Johnson's address in the 2001 block of Holly Avenue. But when ABC 17 News visited the property, the home appeared abandoned, and the lot surrounding it was under construction. Columbia police arrested Johnson in April 2021, after being called to a home in the 1000 block of Elleta Boulevard in north Columbia. According to court documents, police were dispatched to the Women's and Children's Hospital in Columbia on the morning of April 18, 2021, where they were informed that an 8-month-old, Hannah Kent, who was under Johnson's care, had died. Court documents indicate the parents left Kent and other children in Johnson's care beginning around 5 p.m. the previous day. The mother found the child around 8:30 a.m. unresponsive and cool to the touch after returning home and immediately noticed bruising, court documents indicate. The parents then took the child to Women's and Children's Hospital, where the infant was pronounced dead at 8:45 am. Johnson allegedly told police that she last saw the infant alive at 2:15 a.m. after giving a bottle to the child, the probable cause statement says. According to court documents, Johnson took a call from the parents saying the baby had died and the parents wanted to see Johnson. Two people who knew Johnson brought items that Johnson had at the home to the Columbia police, court documents say. Investigators allegedly found baby formula on Johnson's clothes, and a swab of the same shirt tested positive for blood. Johnson was previously charged with two counts of assault in Howard County in 2019. The complaint in the case states she strangled and bit another woman. Kent's family declined to comment. DOC041921_04192021170840Download Click here to follow the original article.

How evil killer 'Devil in the Ozarks' used 'tea, coffee and permanent marker' to escape from prison
How evil killer 'Devil in the Ozarks' used 'tea, coffee and permanent marker' to escape from prison

Daily Mail​

time18-06-2025

  • Daily Mail​

How evil killer 'Devil in the Ozarks' used 'tea, coffee and permanent marker' to escape from prison

The 'Devil in the Ozarks' made the makeshift prison guard uniform he wore while seamlessly escaping the facility using tea, coffee and markers, investigators believe. Grant Hardin, a convicted murderer and rapist whose notoriety led to a television documentary, escaped from the North Central Unit in Calico Rock on May 25. After nearly two weeks on the run, authorities tracked down and captured the 56-year-old criminal roughly a mile in the woods, roughly a mile from the prison he casually walked out of dressed as a guard. Now, the Arkansas Department of Corrections (DOC) is piecing together how he pulled it off. 'This wasn't something he came up with that Sunday morning when he woke up,' Rand Champion, a spokesman for the Arkansas DOC told The New York Times. 'This was well thought out and was something he had been planning for a while.' Hardin spent months studying prison schedules and plotting for the right moment to act. A key aspect of his jaw-dropping escape was the makeshift guard uniform he wore - which he likely used tea, coffee and permanent marker to create. Using the unsuspecting items the kitchen is stocked with, investigators speculate he dyed one of his old white uniforms over time. 'It looked black,' Champion told the outlet. 'He either dyed it or colored it in with Sharpies over time. Maybe both.' Hardin, a former police chief with more than 30 years of law enforcement experience, had ample knowledge of how he was supposed to look and carry himself to fit in with the guards, Champion said. Wearing his handcrafted disguise - a black shirt, pants, cap and what looked like a correctional vest - he rolled a cart past a checkpoint, where a guard opened a fence for him. Security video captured the moment he walked out of the prison's confines - taking confident strides and showing no signs of panic. Investigators said they need to further interview Hardin and take a closer look at what he was wearing to truly know what happened leading up to the chilling breakout. Corrections officials have only determined that he did not have any help putting his makeshift uniform together. Champion previously noted that someone should have checked Hardin's identity before he was allowed to leave, describing the lack of verification as a 'lapse' that's being investigated. Hardin has been returned to the custody of the Arkansas Department of Corrections, where he faces not just his previous sentences but new charges stemming from his escape Meanwhile, Hardin pleaded not guilty to the escape charge when he appeared in court on Tuesday. He is now in custody at Varner Supermax, more than 200 miles away from where he escaped. The horrifying nature of Hardin's story has stunned not only his Arkansas community but the nation. Once sworn to protect and serve, Hardin is now best known for the brutal slaying that sent him to prison in 2017. He shot James Appleton, a water department employee, in the head on the side of a road in a small town called Gateway. Police found the victim's body inside a car. A witness identified Hardin and the gunman. The disgraced police chief pleaded guilty to murder and was sentenced to 30 years. While serving his time, a DNA sample taken in prison linked him to the 1997 rape of an elementary schoolteacher in Rogers. Hardin pleaded guilty to the kidnapping and rape of Amy Harrison, who he assaulted at gunpoint in a school bathroom. As a result, another 50 years was tacked onto his sentence. His gut-wrenching crimes and his law enforcement background left the communities surrounding the North Central Unit horrified when he escaped the mixed-custody facility after nearly three decades behind bars. 'He's just an evil man,' Cheryl Tillman, Appleton's heartbroken sister, told NPR while Hardin was on the run. 'He is no good for society.' Tillman said that Hardin's capture was a 'big sigh of relief' for her whole family. 'We don't have to walk around, turning around all the time, thinking somebody´s on our back,' Tillman said, emphasizing her appreciation for the officers who helped capture Hardin. Before cultivating fear with his masterminded exit strategy, Hardin found himself under a spotlight in 2023, when an HBO documentary called the 'Devil in the Ozarks' aired. The tear-jerking film featured interviews with everyone from the victim of the 1997 rape and sisters of the murder victim, to Hardin's family. The documentary revealed a crucial run-in between Hardin and Appleton in the Spring of 2016 in which Appleton stood up to Hardin about fixing a police car. 'He was out chasing cars for no reason,' Tillman said. 'He was pulling guns on the citizens here in Gateway and then as time went on with him being the police chief things just started going down hill fast.' Then-Gateway Mayor Andrew Tillman, who was Appleton's brother-in-law, described being on the phone with him when he was shot, while local resident John Bray spoke about driving past Appleton's car when the shooting happened. He was the first to find his body and identified Hardin as the shooter. 'I heard what I thought was someone had fired a rifle,' he said. 'I went back and I seen it looked like he had been shot,' he added, wiping away tears. It revealed key details about the resentment Hardin felt toward Appleton, as well as depicting accounts of the moments right before and after the murder. A Benton County Sheriff's Office lieutenant described several times when they got into each other's faces and the dislike they both felt toward one another. The city council gave him an ultimatum: resign or be fired. He stepped down four months after taking the position and nine months later, he killed Appleton. The documentary also includes security video of Hardin at a restaurant with his family just after the shooting and the police interrogation in which he tells law enforcement he has 'the right to be silent' and opted not to give a statement. It also gave insight into his troubled and scattered career. He worked at the Fayetteville Police Department from August 1990 to May 1991, but was let go because he did not meet the standards of his training period. Hardin worked about six months at the Huntsville Police Department before resigning, but records do not give a reason for his resignation, according to Police Chief Todd Thomas, who joined the department after Hardin worked there. Hardin later worked at the Eureka Springs Police Department from 1993 to 1996. Former Chief Earl Hyatt said Hardin resigned because Hyatt was going to fire him over incidents that included the use of excessive force. 'He did not need to be a police officer at all,' Hyatt told television station KNWA.

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