By CONNOR HOLMES
published in the Cape Coral Daily Breeze 8/6/09
The trial of a Fort Myers man charged as a principal in the shooting death of another during a botched armed robbery began Wednesday.
The robbery victim and eyewitnesses testified against Damion Shearod, 22, in connection to the May 16, 2007, incident.
Shearod is charged with second-degree murder with a firearm, attempted armed robbery with a firearm and armed burglary.
According to witness testimony, Shearod and 21-year-old John Patrick Moore Jr., armed with a revolver, attempted to rob Jacob Seckler at his Cape Coral home at 2125 N.E. First Ave.
Jazzmyne R. Carrol-Love, Moore's girlfriend, waited nearby in Shearod's car.
Seckler was mowing his lawn when Shearod and Moore confronted him with the gun, Seckler told the six-man, two-woman jury.
"I did what people do in wild west movies and put my hands in the air," he said. "I said, 'Are you kidding?' They said, 'You think we're kidding. We'll shoot you right here.'"
Seckler said Moore beat him with the gun in the entryway of the home, until Moore dropped the weapon and Seckler grabbed it, fatally shooting him in the front yard.
"I grabbed the gun," Seckler said. "I did not aim, I just turned around and started shooting."
Shearod fled, attempting to convince Cape resident Lisa Wright to give him a ride, then hiding in the back porch of another nearby home. He was found and detained by the police.
Seckler said he believed one of his wife's acquaintances, Carroll Cody, was behind the robbery, though Cody has not been accused or charged in the incident.
Cody reportedly admitted to stealing Seckler's expensive watch days before the robbery.
Seckler said Cody threatened to pour acid on his wife's face if she tried to get the watch back, though presiding Judge Mark Steinbeck asked the jury to disregard the information.
"I assumed that there was some connection (between Cody and the robbery)," Seckler said.
Carrol-Love also took the witness stand Wednesday, testifying that she saw Seckler shoot Moore.
"I just saw (Seckler) lift his hands and after that, all I remember is (Moore) coming to the end of the driveway and falling," she said. "I jumped into the front seat and I took off because I didn't know if the guy was going to shoot me.
"I had no idea where I was driving to, I just wanted to get from in front of his house because I didn't know what he was going to do," Carrol-Love said. "As soon as I got out of the neighborhood there was a policeman right behind me."
She said she did not realize Moore and Shearod had planned to rob Seckler until they approached him with the gun.
According to Cape Coral detective Walter Herman, Shearod also claimed that he was not initially aware of the robbery.
"He said, 'I didn't know my buddy was going to rob that white guy. I didn't touch the guy,'" Herman told the jury Wednesday.
Seckler testified that Shearod was an active participant in the robbery, and even bit him on the back during a struggle.
Shearod's trial resumes at 9 a.m. today.
Showing posts with label attempted murder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label attempted murder. Show all posts
Thursday, August 6, 2009
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Washington receives four life sentences in ’06 double killing
By CONNOR HOLMES
published in the Cape Coral Daily Breeze and Naples Daily News 7/21/09
After two trials and an eventual conviction on two counts each of first-degree murder, kidnapping and aggravated battery with a deadly weapon, Roderick Washington will serve four consecutive life sentences plus 30 years in prison, a Lee County judge said Monday.
Lee Circuit Judge Thomas Reese handed down the sentence after Washington, 19, was found guilty for his role in the 2006 double slaying of Alexis Sosa, 18, and Jeffrey Sosa, 14.
Isabel Sosa, Jeffrey and Alexis Sosa's grandmother, commented in Spanish that she is "very satisfied and happy with the prosecutors, the State Attorney's Office, the judge and the jury."
Witness testimony pegged Washington as holding a gun to the Sosas at co-defendant Kemar Johnston's home while they were bound, beat and tortured. He also helped carry the Sosas to the trunk of a car used to transport them to a north Cape Coral industrial site where they were fatally shot.
Nine others, several of whom were reportedly members of a rap group called the "Cash Feenz," are accused in the murders.
Washington's mother said her son was not a member of the Cash Feenz.
"They tried to make him seem like he was one of the Cash Feenz, and he wasn't," Lashun Washington said following the sentencing Monday afternoon. "He didn't deserve life."
Lashun Washington pointed to the unreliability of witness statements during the trial, which defined Washington's role as a principal in the Sosas' killings but were inconsistent in other respects.
"You have a lot of witnesses telling lies," she said. "He didn't have a chance."
Washington will appeal the decision, and will attempt to retain defense attorney Paul Sullivan's council for the process, Lashun Washington said.
Washington has 30 days to file for appeal.
published in the Cape Coral Daily Breeze and Naples Daily News 7/21/09
After two trials and an eventual conviction on two counts each of first-degree murder, kidnapping and aggravated battery with a deadly weapon, Roderick Washington will serve four consecutive life sentences plus 30 years in prison, a Lee County judge said Monday.
Lee Circuit Judge Thomas Reese handed down the sentence after Washington, 19, was found guilty for his role in the 2006 double slaying of Alexis Sosa, 18, and Jeffrey Sosa, 14.
Isabel Sosa, Jeffrey and Alexis Sosa's grandmother, commented in Spanish that she is "very satisfied and happy with the prosecutors, the State Attorney's Office, the judge and the jury."
Witness testimony pegged Washington as holding a gun to the Sosas at co-defendant Kemar Johnston's home while they were bound, beat and tortured. He also helped carry the Sosas to the trunk of a car used to transport them to a north Cape Coral industrial site where they were fatally shot.
Nine others, several of whom were reportedly members of a rap group called the "Cash Feenz," are accused in the murders.
Washington's mother said her son was not a member of the Cash Feenz.
"They tried to make him seem like he was one of the Cash Feenz, and he wasn't," Lashun Washington said following the sentencing Monday afternoon. "He didn't deserve life."
Lashun Washington pointed to the unreliability of witness statements during the trial, which defined Washington's role as a principal in the Sosas' killings but were inconsistent in other respects.
"You have a lot of witnesses telling lies," she said. "He didn't have a chance."
Washington will appeal the decision, and will attempt to retain defense attorney Paul Sullivan's council for the process, Lashun Washington said.
Washington has 30 days to file for appeal.
Labels:
attempted murder,
Cape Coral,
Cash Feenz,
Roderick,
sentencing,
Washington
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Jury: Washington guilty in torture and slayings; ‘Cash Feenz’ member to get life
By CONNOR HOLMES
published in the Cape Coral Daily Breeze and Naples Daily News 7/14/09
Thirty years in prison the first time.
A lifetime the second.
That is the order in which Roderick Washington's guilt was determined for his role in the 2006 tortures and killings of Alexis, 18, and Jeffrey Sosa, 14, over the course of two murder trials.
Washington, 19, was found guilty of two counts of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon during his first trial in May, and was sentenced to serve two consecutive 15-year prison terms.
The alleged member of the "Cash Feenz" rap group accused in the brutal slayings will now face a mandatory life prison sentence for two counts each of first-degree murder and kidnapping.
A 10-man, 2-woman jury determined Washington's guilt over the course of three hours Monday.
The decision stands in staunch contrast to the May trial when the jury deadlocked on the murder and kidnapping charges after nearly a day and a half behind closed doors.
Washington shared a silent nod with a family member in the courtroom gallery as he was fingerprinted and escorted into custody.
Outside the courtroom on the eighth floor of the Lee County Justice Center annex building, a woman burst into sobs and embraced her child.
Members of the Washington family declined to comment on his conviction.
Despite defense attorney Paul Sullivan's protests that the state's witnesses were unreliable party-goers and co-defendants who would say anything to keep their plea deals, the jury relied on the collective testimony to adjudicate Washington guilty on all counts.
"We're obviously very pleased with the verdict," said Assistant State Attorney Marie Doerr. "We've felt all along that Mr. Washington was a major player in these Cash Feenz tortures and murders. We're pleased that they took three hours to come back and find a verdict of guilty on these four serious charges."
Doerr said that bringing in additional witnesses and tightening loose ends in the few months between trials likely strengthened their case against Washington, possibly a factor in the second jury's notably quicker decision.
Witnesses pegged Washington as holding a gun to the Sosas as they were bound, carved with knives, covered with bleach and shocked with a Taser at the birthday party of co-defendant Kemar Johnston.
They also said he helped place the Sosas in the trunk of a car used to transport them to a north Cape Coral industrial site where they were fatally shot.
Co-defendants, including Alexis Fernandez, Iriana Santos, Melissa Rivera and Michael Balint, along with several party-goers, were hazy on various details of the evening the Sosas were killed, but remembered distinctively Washington wielding a .22-caliber rifle and, at one point, a pistol.
Washington's part in the kidnapping of the Sosas makes him a principal to their murders, regardless of premeditation, because of the inherent danger of holding another human being against their will.
Washington will be sentenced Monday before Lee Circuit Judge Thomas Reese.
He has 30 days from the date of his sentencing to appeal the decision.
Washington is the second Cash Feenz defendant to be found guilty in the 2006 double murder, after Ashley Toye who was previously sentenced to life without parole.
Co-defendants Kemar Johnston, Kenneth Lopez and Paul Nunez still await trial in the case.
Melissa Rivera, Iriana Santos, Alexis Fernandez, Cody Roux and Michael Balint have each pleaded guilty to lesser crimes and will receive prison sentences varying between 14 and 26 years in exchange for their testimony during the trials of their remaining co-defendants.
published in the Cape Coral Daily Breeze and Naples Daily News 7/14/09
Thirty years in prison the first time.
A lifetime the second.
That is the order in which Roderick Washington's guilt was determined for his role in the 2006 tortures and killings of Alexis, 18, and Jeffrey Sosa, 14, over the course of two murder trials.
Washington, 19, was found guilty of two counts of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon during his first trial in May, and was sentenced to serve two consecutive 15-year prison terms.
The alleged member of the "Cash Feenz" rap group accused in the brutal slayings will now face a mandatory life prison sentence for two counts each of first-degree murder and kidnapping.
A 10-man, 2-woman jury determined Washington's guilt over the course of three hours Monday.
The decision stands in staunch contrast to the May trial when the jury deadlocked on the murder and kidnapping charges after nearly a day and a half behind closed doors.
Washington shared a silent nod with a family member in the courtroom gallery as he was fingerprinted and escorted into custody.
Outside the courtroom on the eighth floor of the Lee County Justice Center annex building, a woman burst into sobs and embraced her child.
Members of the Washington family declined to comment on his conviction.
Despite defense attorney Paul Sullivan's protests that the state's witnesses were unreliable party-goers and co-defendants who would say anything to keep their plea deals, the jury relied on the collective testimony to adjudicate Washington guilty on all counts.
"We're obviously very pleased with the verdict," said Assistant State Attorney Marie Doerr. "We've felt all along that Mr. Washington was a major player in these Cash Feenz tortures and murders. We're pleased that they took three hours to come back and find a verdict of guilty on these four serious charges."
Doerr said that bringing in additional witnesses and tightening loose ends in the few months between trials likely strengthened their case against Washington, possibly a factor in the second jury's notably quicker decision.
Witnesses pegged Washington as holding a gun to the Sosas as they were bound, carved with knives, covered with bleach and shocked with a Taser at the birthday party of co-defendant Kemar Johnston.
They also said he helped place the Sosas in the trunk of a car used to transport them to a north Cape Coral industrial site where they were fatally shot.
Co-defendants, including Alexis Fernandez, Iriana Santos, Melissa Rivera and Michael Balint, along with several party-goers, were hazy on various details of the evening the Sosas were killed, but remembered distinctively Washington wielding a .22-caliber rifle and, at one point, a pistol.
Washington's part in the kidnapping of the Sosas makes him a principal to their murders, regardless of premeditation, because of the inherent danger of holding another human being against their will.
Washington will be sentenced Monday before Lee Circuit Judge Thomas Reese.
He has 30 days from the date of his sentencing to appeal the decision.
Washington is the second Cash Feenz defendant to be found guilty in the 2006 double murder, after Ashley Toye who was previously sentenced to life without parole.
Co-defendants Kemar Johnston, Kenneth Lopez and Paul Nunez still await trial in the case.
Melissa Rivera, Iriana Santos, Alexis Fernandez, Cody Roux and Michael Balint have each pleaded guilty to lesser crimes and will receive prison sentences varying between 14 and 26 years in exchange for their testimony during the trials of their remaining co-defendants.
Labels:
attempted murder,
Cape Coral,
Cash Feenz,
guilty,
retrial,
Roderick,
Washington
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
Roderick Washington 'Cash Feenz' retrial day 1
3:17 -- Jury for Washington trial whittled by 17; questioning continues
Judge Thomas Reese, prosecutors and defense attorneys have concluded private questioning of individual jurors in the double-murder retrial of Roderick Washington.
Washington is accused in the 2006 double-murder of Jeffrey and Alexis Sosa in Cape Coral. He faces two charges each of kidnaping and first-degree murder, and was convicted of two counts of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon during his first trial.
As a result of the questioning, 17 of 55 potential jurors were excused for various reasons. Two jurors said that for religious reasons they could not judge other people.
One potential juror was excused after he told Reese he knew several witnesses as schoolmates, including co-defendant Cody Roux, who pleaded guilty to two counts each of kidnaping and aggravated battery with a deadly weapon in 2008 in exchange for a 14-year prison sentence. The juror also told Reese he knew the Sosas through mutual friends.
Despite defense attorney Paul Sullivan’s motions to dismiss potential jurors with knowledge of Washington’s recently received 30-year prison sentence, those jurors were allowed to stay for the time being.
Jurors are now being asked biographical questions in open court, after which lawyers will be given the opportunity to address the jury.
1:45 -- Attorneys search for bias in potential Washington jurors; closed-door questioning continues
Jury selection in the double-murder retrial of Roderick Washington has resumed following a break for lunch.
Lee Circuit judge Thomas Reese and attorneys are questioning potential jurors in a private room behind the courtroom. Also present are a court stenographer, a bailiff, a court reporter and several media reporters.
Reese is asking each juror if they have heard of the case, if they have formed opinions, if they can be impartial and if they are able to sit on a jury for multiple days, likely into next week.
The defense has asked several jurors if they have heard of the ‘Cash Feenz,’ the alleged gang accused in the beating, torture and killing of Alexis and Jeffrey Sosa in 2006.
Several jurors have heard of Washington’s case through news reports.
Two jurors have been excused due to their knowledge of Washington’s recent sentencing of 30 years in prison for two counts of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon. Another juror, for whom today is the anniversary of his son’s murder, was excused due to his inability to be impartial.
Jury selection continues.
11:30 -- Jury selection continues in Washington double-murder retrial; some admit bias
Potential jurors in the double-murder retrial of Roderick Washington are being questioned by attorneys privately as other perspective jurors chat quietly or read in the courtroom gallery.
Attorneys will select 12 jurors with two alternates, the same number of jurors to try Washington’s first trial in May.
Washington is being tried for the 2006 double-murder of Jeffrey and Alexis Sosa. Washington is among 10 individuals charged in the incident. He was convicted of two counts of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon during the first trial, and was sentenced to 30 years in prison Tuesday as a result of the conviction.
Washington will be retried on two counts each of first-degree murder and kidnaping, charges for which the jury in trial number one could not determine a verdict. He faces a life prison sentence if convicted.
In open court, several potential jurors expressed concern they might be unable to withhold bias against Washington while deliberating his case. A woman who teaches at Challenger Middle School said she was biased against Washington because the Sosas had been students at the school, and she followed the case closely. Another man expressed his grief on the anniversary of his son’s murder, stating he likely could not be impartial.
Assistant State Attorney Bob Lee told presiding Lee Circuit judge Thomas Reese he anticipated the prosecution’s case would last 2 to 3 days. Paul Sullivan, Washington’s defense attorney, stated he was unsure at this stage in the trial about the duration of his defense.
The jurors will likely break for lunch at noon and return to the courtroom at 1 p.m. to resume questioning.
10:30 -- Jury selection begins in Washington double-murder retrial
Fifty-five potential jurors will soon be brought into a Lee County Justice Center courtroom to begin jury selection in the Cash Feenz double-murder retrial of Roderick A. Washington.
Washington is one of 10 co-defendants in the beating, torture and killing of Jeffrey and Alexis Sosa at a 2006 house party by a rap group and alleged gang known as the Cash Feenz.
He is accused of holding a gun on the Sosas as they were tied up and tortured by several others at co-defendant Kemar Johnston’s Cape Coral home.
Washington was found guilty of two counts of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon during his first trial in early May. However, jurors were unable to determine guilt on four other counts, two first-degree murder counts and two counts of kidnaping.
Judge Thomas Reese, who is presiding over Washington’s trial this week, sentenced him Tuesday to served two 15-year prison terms consecutively, for a total of 30 years. Washington must serve the sentence regardless of the outcome of his second trial, which will focus on the remaining four counts.
Several family members from both the Sosa and Washington families are present in the courtroom this morning as Washington and attorneys quietly await the arrival of the jury.
Judge Thomas Reese, prosecutors and defense attorneys have concluded private questioning of individual jurors in the double-murder retrial of Roderick Washington.
Washington is accused in the 2006 double-murder of Jeffrey and Alexis Sosa in Cape Coral. He faces two charges each of kidnaping and first-degree murder, and was convicted of two counts of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon during his first trial.
As a result of the questioning, 17 of 55 potential jurors were excused for various reasons. Two jurors said that for religious reasons they could not judge other people.
One potential juror was excused after he told Reese he knew several witnesses as schoolmates, including co-defendant Cody Roux, who pleaded guilty to two counts each of kidnaping and aggravated battery with a deadly weapon in 2008 in exchange for a 14-year prison sentence. The juror also told Reese he knew the Sosas through mutual friends.
Despite defense attorney Paul Sullivan’s motions to dismiss potential jurors with knowledge of Washington’s recently received 30-year prison sentence, those jurors were allowed to stay for the time being.
Jurors are now being asked biographical questions in open court, after which lawyers will be given the opportunity to address the jury.
1:45 -- Attorneys search for bias in potential Washington jurors; closed-door questioning continues
Jury selection in the double-murder retrial of Roderick Washington has resumed following a break for lunch.
Lee Circuit judge Thomas Reese and attorneys are questioning potential jurors in a private room behind the courtroom. Also present are a court stenographer, a bailiff, a court reporter and several media reporters.
Reese is asking each juror if they have heard of the case, if they have formed opinions, if they can be impartial and if they are able to sit on a jury for multiple days, likely into next week.
The defense has asked several jurors if they have heard of the ‘Cash Feenz,’ the alleged gang accused in the beating, torture and killing of Alexis and Jeffrey Sosa in 2006.
Several jurors have heard of Washington’s case through news reports.
Two jurors have been excused due to their knowledge of Washington’s recent sentencing of 30 years in prison for two counts of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon. Another juror, for whom today is the anniversary of his son’s murder, was excused due to his inability to be impartial.
Jury selection continues.
11:30 -- Jury selection continues in Washington double-murder retrial; some admit bias
Potential jurors in the double-murder retrial of Roderick Washington are being questioned by attorneys privately as other perspective jurors chat quietly or read in the courtroom gallery.
Attorneys will select 12 jurors with two alternates, the same number of jurors to try Washington’s first trial in May.
Washington is being tried for the 2006 double-murder of Jeffrey and Alexis Sosa. Washington is among 10 individuals charged in the incident. He was convicted of two counts of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon during the first trial, and was sentenced to 30 years in prison Tuesday as a result of the conviction.
Washington will be retried on two counts each of first-degree murder and kidnaping, charges for which the jury in trial number one could not determine a verdict. He faces a life prison sentence if convicted.
In open court, several potential jurors expressed concern they might be unable to withhold bias against Washington while deliberating his case. A woman who teaches at Challenger Middle School said she was biased against Washington because the Sosas had been students at the school, and she followed the case closely. Another man expressed his grief on the anniversary of his son’s murder, stating he likely could not be impartial.
Assistant State Attorney Bob Lee told presiding Lee Circuit judge Thomas Reese he anticipated the prosecution’s case would last 2 to 3 days. Paul Sullivan, Washington’s defense attorney, stated he was unsure at this stage in the trial about the duration of his defense.
The jurors will likely break for lunch at noon and return to the courtroom at 1 p.m. to resume questioning.
10:30 -- Jury selection begins in Washington double-murder retrial
Fifty-five potential jurors will soon be brought into a Lee County Justice Center courtroom to begin jury selection in the Cash Feenz double-murder retrial of Roderick A. Washington.
Washington is one of 10 co-defendants in the beating, torture and killing of Jeffrey and Alexis Sosa at a 2006 house party by a rap group and alleged gang known as the Cash Feenz.
He is accused of holding a gun on the Sosas as they were tied up and tortured by several others at co-defendant Kemar Johnston’s Cape Coral home.
Washington was found guilty of two counts of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon during his first trial in early May. However, jurors were unable to determine guilt on four other counts, two first-degree murder counts and two counts of kidnaping.
Judge Thomas Reese, who is presiding over Washington’s trial this week, sentenced him Tuesday to served two 15-year prison terms consecutively, for a total of 30 years. Washington must serve the sentence regardless of the outcome of his second trial, which will focus on the remaining four counts.
Several family members from both the Sosa and Washington families are present in the courtroom this morning as Washington and attorneys quietly await the arrival of the jury.
Labels:
attempted murder,
Cape Coral,
retrial,
Roderick,
Washington
SW Florida Crime Stoppers adds Cape man to ‘wanted’ list; Perez sought for alleged role in attempted killing
By CONNOR HOLMES
published in the Cape Coral Daily Breeze 7/8/09
A Cape Coral man, still on the run Monday from authorities following a June 25 torture and beating incident, has been added to Southwest Florida Crime Stoppers' 10 Most Wanted Criminals list, officials said.
Oscar Perez Jr. is wanted on charges of attempted second-degree murder, two counts of kidnapping, home invasion robbery and grand theft of a motor vehicle after police say he and three other men beat, tortured and attempted to kill a Cape man over an unpaid debt to Perez's mother.
Cape Coral police announced Friday that they had issued a warrant for the arrest of Perez, 27.
Perez and three others are accused of beating and torturing the victim in Perez's mother's home in her presence, and later in the presence of the victim's wife. According to police reports, they also stole various things from the victim's home, including a car, and threatened his wife and children with violence.
Perez's mother, Luz Huyo, has been charged with kidnapping, aggravated battery, home invasion robbery, larceny and vehicle theft in the incident.
Southwest Florida Crime Stoppers continues to reach out to the public for tips on where Perez or others involved in the incident might be located.
The organization now regards Perez among nine other accused killers, robbers and sexual abusers who threaten Lee County and remain on the run from law enforcement officials, according to Crime Stoppers coordinator Trish Routte.
"Being named as one of Crime Stoppers' Most Wanted puts Perez in a group of individuals who pose an absolute threat to our community," Routte said Monday in a prepared statement. "Anyone who could exhibit that level of torture and violence upon another human being is definitely deserving of the status as one of our most sought after criminals who needs to be put in jail where he can do no further harm."
Anyone with information regarding Perez's whereabouts or that of the three others involved in the incident is urged to anonymously call Crime Stoppers at (800) 780-TIPS (8477) and become eligible for $1,000 in reward money.
published in the Cape Coral Daily Breeze 7/8/09
A Cape Coral man, still on the run Monday from authorities following a June 25 torture and beating incident, has been added to Southwest Florida Crime Stoppers' 10 Most Wanted Criminals list, officials said.
Oscar Perez Jr. is wanted on charges of attempted second-degree murder, two counts of kidnapping, home invasion robbery and grand theft of a motor vehicle after police say he and three other men beat, tortured and attempted to kill a Cape man over an unpaid debt to Perez's mother.
Cape Coral police announced Friday that they had issued a warrant for the arrest of Perez, 27.
Perez and three others are accused of beating and torturing the victim in Perez's mother's home in her presence, and later in the presence of the victim's wife. According to police reports, they also stole various things from the victim's home, including a car, and threatened his wife and children with violence.
Perez's mother, Luz Huyo, has been charged with kidnapping, aggravated battery, home invasion robbery, larceny and vehicle theft in the incident.
Southwest Florida Crime Stoppers continues to reach out to the public for tips on where Perez or others involved in the incident might be located.
The organization now regards Perez among nine other accused killers, robbers and sexual abusers who threaten Lee County and remain on the run from law enforcement officials, according to Crime Stoppers coordinator Trish Routte.
"Being named as one of Crime Stoppers' Most Wanted puts Perez in a group of individuals who pose an absolute threat to our community," Routte said Monday in a prepared statement. "Anyone who could exhibit that level of torture and violence upon another human being is definitely deserving of the status as one of our most sought after criminals who needs to be put in jail where he can do no further harm."
Anyone with information regarding Perez's whereabouts or that of the three others involved in the incident is urged to anonymously call Crime Stoppers at (800) 780-TIPS (8477) and become eligible for $1,000 in reward money.
Labels:
attempted murder,
Cape Coral,
crime stoppers,
torture,
wanted
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