Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Crime Alert.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
I'm Nancy Grace breaking crime news Now. Three months after
Jared Discus marries Angie Diaz just twenty one, she suddenly
stops responding to calls and texts from family. Houston cops
agreed to a welfare check. In the couple's bedroom. They
find Angie lying in a pool of blood, decapitated, stab
wounds to her back, Her head found in the shower.
(00:22):
Discus admitting he killed Diaz in a jealous fit.
Speaker 3 (00:26):
Nancy authorities say that Dykas used a kitchen knife in
the attack on his bride. Dykas was found at the
scene where he confessed to the murderer. Cops were reportedly
called to the property several times for domestic violence issues
before the murder. In court, Dikas's mental health was called
into question, but he was deemed competent to stand trial.
Speaker 2 (00:44):
Jared Discus twenty three, takes a plea deal for forty
years in prison for the murder of bride Angie Diaz.
Anthony Edlin gets in an argument with his mom, Denise
come Adecca, while she cooks dinner at their home. Son
Edlin escalates grabbing his mom's Panta spaghetti sauce and dumping
(01:04):
it over her head. He runs from the home while
mom calls police. Officers find Edlin hiding in the bushes.
He's quickly handcuffed. Anthony Edlin, the son, forty one, now
charged with domestic battery and resisting arrest. More crime and
justice news after this Now with the latest crime and
(01:27):
justice breaking news. Crime Onlines John Lemley.
Speaker 1 (01:30):
In Ohio, Chad Doorman has been sentenced to life in
prison without the possibility of parole for the shooting deaths
of his three young sons at their home last year
with Moore. Here's Sidney Sumner of Crime Online.
Speaker 3 (01:43):
The thirty three year old Dorman received three consecutive life
terms for the murders of seven year old Clayton Doorman,
four year old Hunter Dorman, and three year old Chase Doorman. Additionally,
he was sentenced to sixteen years for injuring his former
wife and his stepdaughter. A Clermont County judge handed down
the sentence for Dorman after he pleaded guilty to aggravated
murder and felonious assault charges. Originally, prosecutor marked to Colvey
(02:06):
intended to seek the death penalty for the June fifteenth,
twenty twenty three killings in Monroe Township, located about seventy
five miles west of Columbus. However, to Colvey cited the
ongoing trauma experienced by the surviving family members as a
reason for not pursuing the death penalty. Dorman was apprehended
at the scene, found sitting on the stoop of his home.
Authorities reported that he had admitted to planning the killings
(02:29):
and had chased down one of his sons in a
field as the child tried to escape. The defense argued
that Doorman was struggling with severe mental illness. In court,
Laura Dorman, the children's mother and Dorman's ex wife, delivered
an emotional statement through a prosecutor, expressing her profound grief
and loss. She said, quote, my life has been ripped
away from me and destroyed, then described her ongoing anguish
(02:51):
and the love she still holds for her children. Following
the sentencing, Laura Dorman stated she was in full agreement
with the resolution, acknowledging that no punishment could bring her
boys back, but expressing relief that Dorman will spend the
rest of his life behind bars. Laura Dorman expressed gratitude
to prosecutors and first responders, and requested privacy for her
family as they continued to grieve.
Speaker 1 (03:12):
Laura Dorman also asked the public to remember her children
as they were before the tragic events of that day.
US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austen has overturned a plea agreement
for the accused mastermind of the September eleventh, two thousand
and one attacks and two other defendants, reinstating them as
death penalty cases once again, crime Online Sidney Sumner.
Speaker 3 (03:35):
The decision comes just days after a military commission at
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, announced that retired Brigadier General Susan Escalier,
the official overseeing the war court, had approved plea deals
for Khalid Sheik Mohammed and his accused accomplices Walid bin
Atash and Mustapha al Hasawi. These deals would have seen
the defendant serve life sentences at most, according to letters
(03:57):
sent to the families of nearly three thousand victims of
the Al Qaira attacks. In his order, Secretary Austin stated
that in light of the significance of the decision, he
had determined that the authority to accept the plea agreements
was his alone, thereby nullifying Escalier's approval. Khaleage Sheik Mohammad,
described by US officials as the principal architect of the attacks,
along with ben Atash and Al Hasawi, were expected to
(04:20):
formally enter their pleas under the now nullified agreement as
early as this week. A fourth defendant in the nine
to eleven case at Guantanamo Bay is still negotiating a
possible plea agreement. The fifth defendant was deemed mentally unfit
to stand trial last year by a military medical panel,
which cited post traumatic stress disorder and psychosis linked to
his torture in solitary confinement during four years in CIA
(04:42):
custody before his transfer to Guantanamo.
Speaker 1 (04:45):
This latest decision by Secretary Austin underscores the ongoing complexities
and challenges in seeking justice for one of the darkest
days in American history.
Speaker 2 (04:55):
Thanks John Vena McGinnis, twenty four, reported missing when he
doesn't show up to his night job in glen Burnie, Maryland.
Neighbors say he was at home earlier that day and
nothing seemed unusual. His car phone while at a keys
missing from home the day he disappears, two hundred bucks
withdrawn from his bank account. His phone last pings at
(05:17):
the Marley Station Mall. Two weeks later, his Hyundai Accent
found abandon near Page, Arizona, over two thousand miles away.
The car did not have a license plate and low
on gas. Cops believed the car part Therefore, at least
five days searches of the area turn up nothing. Brennan
(05:37):
five eleven, one hundred ninety pounds long, brown hair, blue eyes,
usually a full beard, last seen wearing a blue hoodie, jeans,
black shoes. If you have info on Brennan McGinnis, now
missing eight months, called Coconino County, Arizona Sheriff's nine two eight, seven,
seven four four or five two three. For the latest
(06:00):
crime injustice news, go to crimeonline dot com and please
join us for our daily podcast Crime Stories with this
crime alert, I'm Nancy Grace.