Tuesday 21 October 2014

Indiana killings may go back decades





  • Suspect Darren Deon Vann, 43, was convicted of aggravated rape in 2009

  • Indiana authorities have found seven women's bodies since Friday; Vann is in custody

  • The suspect's confession led to six of the possible homicide victims, police say

  • Vann has been charged in the death of 19-year-old Afrikka Hardy




(CNN) -- The investigation of a man suspected in the deaths of at least seven women in northwest Indiana could expand to other states and stretch back decades, authorities said.


The Indiana-born Darren Deon Vann is a convicted sex offender from Austin, Texas, police said.


Vann attacked a 25-year-old Hispanic female at an Austin apartment in December 2007, according to Jason Clark, Texas Department of Criminal Justice Public Information Office.


He struck the victim several times, strangled and raped her, Clark said.





Former stepson: Suspect was 'creepy'

Vann was convicted of aggravated rape in 2009 and after serving five years in jail, he left for Indiana in July 2013, police said.


Before his release from prison, Vann was registered as a sex offender in the state of Texas, but informed prison officials that he would be moving to Gary, Indiana, according to Clark.


Texas officials alerted Lake County, Indiana, that Vann would be moving there and to their knowledge, he did register as a sex offender in Indiana, Clark said.


Up to this point, Vann has only been charged in the death of 19-year-old Afrikka Hardy, whose body was found in a Motel 6 in Hammond over the weekend, Hammond Police Chief John Doughty said.


But officials in the neighboring city of Gary have said there's much more to this case.


"The initial murder investigation led to the confession of six other murders committed by Vann with those bodies being recovered in the city of Gary in abandoned structures," a statement said.





Man confesses to murdering 7 women




Suspect named in Indiana deaths




Police: Person of interest in custody




Bodies of 7 women found in Indiana

All of the bodies in Gary were found within 5 miles of each other.


Vann cooperated, gave police descriptions and accompanied officers to certain locations, the chief said.


Asked why Vann chose to cooperate, Doughty said he wanted to cut a deal with prosecutors but didn't provide further details.


"It was just something he wanted to do. That's all I can say," he said.


Gary Mayor Karen Freeman-Wilson echoed the notion that Vann had helped with the investigation.


"He certainly was cooperative. He led (police) to the locations of these bodies," she said. "Whether he was eager or not, I'm not in a position to say that."


Doughty stopped short of calling Vann a suspected serial killer, but left open the possibility if police are able to connect the convicted sex offender to any of the six women found in Gary over the weekend.


"If we directly attach him to it, we can make that assumption," he said, adding that Vann's statements led authorities to believe there are "possible other victims." Some cases may date back 20 years, based on what Vann has told police, said Doughty.


Gary Police Chief Larry McKinley said news of the killings and a possible serial killer has left the community scared.


"It's put the community of Gary on heightened alert," he said. "Any time you have this type of crime that happens in the city, in any city, there is some fear."


Vann has a record


Vann is a convicted sex offender from Austin, Texas, police said. In addition, records show he was arrested on unspecified charges while living in Cherry Point, North Carolina, in 1993. Court records show Vann was convicted in Lake County, Indiana, of misdemeanor residential entry in 2004 and served a 90 day jail sentence for the class D felony.


He was convicted of aggravated rape in 2009 from a 2007 case, the Austin Police Department said. After serving five years in jail, he left for Indiana in June 2013, police said.


Vann is not a registered sex offender in Austin.


The police department there said detectives would be conducting a review of potentially related cases, asking anyone with information to contact its missing person and homicide cold case units.




Afrikka Hardy, 19, was the first woman found, on Friday, according to authorities.

Afrikka Hardy, 19, was the first woman found, on Friday, according to authorities.





Anith Jones, 35, of Merrillville, was one of the victims, a mayor\'s spokeswoman says.

Anith Jones, 35, of Merrillville, was one of the victims, a mayor's spokeswoman says.





Darren Vann led authorities to several bodies in Indiana, police say.

Darren Vann led authorities to several bodies in Indiana, police say.



Vann also had a conviction in Lake County, Indiana, that was "not in the sex offender category," Freeman-Wilson said.


Court records show Vann was accused of breaking and entering and intimidation in 2004.


Vann had registered his sex offender status in Indiana, and authorities made one of their regular checks with him in September.


Text messages


A string of text messages led police to Vann, Doughty said.


Vann, 43, hired a prostitute through the backpage.com site serving Chicago and arranged a Friday meeting at a Motel 6 in Hammond with Hardy, the chief said.


The person who arranged the meeting, whom Doughty described only as "a facilitator," later texted Hardy and received "suspicious texts" she believed were from Vann, the chief said.


She and another person went to the motel to check on Hardy, according to a probable cause affidavit. They found her body in a bathtub and signs of a struggle in the motel room.


Using a phone number provided by the facilitator, police electronically tracked Vann down, the chief said.


Vann told police he "messed up" and expressed surprise that he was found so quickly, Doughty said.


"He admitted his involvement in the Hammond incident" and began leading police to other bodies in Gary, Doughty said.


Seven women


Police found three of the bodies at three abandoned houses in Gary early Sunday morning. Later that night, they found three more bodies -- one at a new location and two at one of the places where bodies were found earlier Sunday, Doughty said.


Hardy and three other women have been identified. Doughty and the Lake County Coroner's Office identified two of the women as Teaira Batey, 28, and Christine Williams, 36.


Chelsea Whittington, a spokeswoman for Freeman-Wilson, identified the other two as Hardy and Anith Jones, 35, of Merrillville, who had been missing since October 8.


Hardy had recently moved back to Indiana from Colorado, after graduating from high school and living in Aurora, Colorado, for 5 years with her mother, Lori Townsend.


"I can't tell her I love her anymore. I can't give her hugs. I can't give her kisses," she told CNN affiliate WLS. "She was supposed to come home for Thanksgiving."


In an interview with affiliate KDVR, Townsend called Hardy her "rock."


"She was my best friend. She was my everything," Townsend said. "When I didn't have anything, she was all I had."


Batey's boyfriend, Marvin Clinton, said her death leaves a big hole. The couple have a 2-year-old son.


"That's going to be the hardest part about it," he told WLS. "Because he loved his mama, and she loved him. It's devastating."


The coroner's office said Williams and Hardy were strangled to death. The coroner listed two of the Jane Does as homicides but didn't elaborate on the cause of death. Doughty declined to say how the other five women died.


As for a motive, Doughty told reporters, "I don't have a specific reason he does this."


CNN's Poppy Harlow, Chad Weaver, Miguel Marquez, Marina Carver, Chuck Johnston, Ronni Berke, Stephanie Gallman, Marina Carver and Joe Sutton contributed to this report.



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