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Quinton Simon

Leilani Simon: Charged With Murdering Her Son – Remains Identified Today

This is a case that shocks the conscious. It goes against the grain of a normal society, of human nature, and what should be a mother’s unconditional love for her child.

Until October 5, 2022, Leilani Simon, 22, her boyfriend Daniel (Danny)Youngkin, and Simon’s three children resided with Simon’s parents, Thomas and Billie Jo Howell, at a home in the 500 block of Burkhalter Road in Savannah, Georgia.

Danny Youngkin, Quinton Simon, and Leilani Simon

On October 5th, 20-month-old Quinton Simon was reported missing and from that moment forward Leilani Simon became known worldwide, and not in a good way. Not at all.

The Timeline

November 2021 – Leilani Simon was working at a Loves Truck Stop off I-95 just north of Fayetteville, North Carolina when she was arrested and charged with a felony for stealing two packs of cigarettes, a bag of popcorn, and a bottle of lemonade from her employer. The judge sentenced Leilani to one year of probation, 48 hours of community service, and approximately $400 in fines. As part of her probation conditions, she was ordered to not to commit any crimes for 12 months.

September 7, 2022 – Lellani Simon called police to report that she’d been assaulted by her mother, Billie Jo Howell.

Billie Jo Howell and grandson Quinton Simon

Below is a copy of the police report about the alleged assault. Hover your cursor over the document to highlight/activate navigation options. Then use the arrow buttons at the bottom of form to advance to the next page to read the officer’s narrative of the incident.

FS1

September 8, 2022 – Billie Jo Howell filed to evict her daughter and Youngkin from her home. In the filing, Howell stated the couple damaged her property and that  “no one is living in peace.” Howell had legal custody of Quinton and his older brother since Quinton was 5-months-old. Leilani recently moved back to her mother’s home and soon after gave birth to a baby girl. The three children each have a different father.

September 16, 2022 – Leilani Simon learned of the eviction notice. The Chatham County Sheriff’s Office mailed the notice to Simon on this date.

On or about September 26, 2022 – Leilani Simon received the eviction notice.

September 28, 2022 – The state of Georgia ordered Leilani to start paying child support to her mother. She was due to begin making payments of $150 per month starting November 1, 2022. However, the order stated the amount would be lowered to $100 if the number of children decreased. Use the arrow buttons at the bottom of form below to continue reading the order.

FS3

October 5, 2022 – At 5:29 a.m., Diana McCarta received a text message from Leilani Simon, the mother of the two children whom McCarta babysat each day. The text was brief, stating her services would not be needed that day. McCarta later told authorities the message was odd because she watched the kids even when their mother didn’t work.

Babysitter Diane McCarta

Leilani’s mother Billie Jo Howell was working out of town in Illinois when she learned Quinton was missing.

6:00 a.m. – Simon’s boyfriend Daniel Youngkin left for work.

At 9:00 a.m., McCarta received another text, this one from a grandparent, asking if she knew the whereabouts of 20-month-old Quinton, who’d last been seen at 6 a.m. by Youngkin.

Around 9:30 a.m., Leilani Simon called 911 to report Quinton as missing. He was last seen wearing a light blue Sesame Street shirt and black pants.

Police respond and begin the search for Quinton. Several agencies participated in the initial search—Chatham County PD, Savannah Police, Liberty County Sheriff’s Office, and the FBI—utilizing horse patrols, K9s, helicopters, drones, officers on foot, and more.

Shea Schrader of WTOC News was on scene to cover the events as they unfolded.

Bloodhounds are on the ground.

Police are limiting foot traffic in the area so the dogs have as clean of a scent to work with as possible. pic.twitter.com/6dvgs6LtfN

— Shea Schrader WTOC (@sheaschrader) October 5, 2022

October 6, 2022 – Police obtain a search warrant for Billie Jo Howell’s residence.

October 8, 2022 – Search continues with no leads available.

October 10, 2022 – Police search the Howell home for a second time, and they drain the backyard swimming pool.

October 11, 2022 – Law enforcement recover evidence they believe will move the case forward. It’s the first sign that a criminal case is likely.

October 12, 2022 – Police inform the family they believe Quinton is dead and that Leilani is the only suspect  in the child’s disappearance and death.

Leilani Simon

October 17, 2022 – Leilani Simon appeared in court pertaining to a custody hearing relating to her other children.

October 18, 2022 – Evidence leads police to believe Quinton’s body was thrown in a dumpster, and then unknowingly transported to the landfill via garbage truck. Law enforcement begin the painstaking search of the landfill.

While landfill searches are only successful 5 percent of the time, law enforcement discovered what they firmly believe to be the remains of Quinton Simon, after meticulously combing through 1.2 million pounds of trash, one item at a time, over a period of 30 days

Later in the evening, as the FBI and local police were searching a Chatham County landfill for Quinton Simon’s remains,  Leilani Simon and her mother Billie Joe Howell, and a few friends were seen at STING RAYS, a Tybee Island beach bar. Tybee Island is 18 miles from Savannah proper.

WSAV news learned from the staff at STING RAYS that the group “took shoots, got flirty and even demanded one waiter’s phone number. The group allegedly ran up a tab worth $300.” This all occurred as the FBI and local police wrapped up their day of searching the Chatham County landfill for Quinton Simon’s remains, and while protestors stood in front of Howell’s home, demanding justice for Quinton.

October 18 – November 18, 2022 – Police continue pawing through mountains of garbage, searching for Quinton’s remains.

November 18, 2022– Police discover possible human remains in the Chatham County landfill. Testing confirmed the remains were indeed human. Authorities are await DNA test results to confirm the remains are those of Quinton Simon.

November 21, 2022 – Leilani Simon is arrested and charged with murder, concealing a death, false statements in matters of government, and false report of a crime.

November 23, 2022 – Leilani Simon’s first court hearing took place at 11 a.m. Simon did not appear at the hearing. Instead, she was represented by her court appointed attorney who, on Simon’s behalf, waived her right to a bond hearing. Bond was subsequently denied by a Chatham County judge.

November 28, 2022 (today) – The FBI in Atlanta confirmed through DNA analysis that the remains found in the landfill belong to Quinton Simon. As a result, the Chatham County Police Department (CCPD) have ceased all search and recovery operations at the landfill, and officials are currently removing Command Post facilities from the staging area at L. Scott Stell Park.


*On November 2, 2022, Quinton Simon’s grandfather, Henry Dale Moss Sr., 61, was found lying off the road on Highway 23 in Burke County. He’d been struck by a vehicle that fled the scene, a hit and run driver. Moss was pronounced dead at the scene.

Quinton’s paternal grandmother, Brandy, died a week earlier.


Quinton Simon

November 28, 2022/by Lee Lofland
https://leelofland.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/lei23.jpg 467 700 Lee Lofland https://leelofland.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/the-graveyard-shift-1.png Lee Lofland2022-11-28 18:10:402022-11-28 18:10:40Leilani Simon: Charged With Murdering Her Son – Remains Identified Today
I'm Just Saying, Writing

Dream On: How Works of Fiction Can Prevent an Overfitted Brain

Do dreams and nightmares influence the work of writers? Does writing influence the dreams experienced by authors? How does reading fiction prevent an overfitted brain?

There are several theories about why we dream, the different types of dreams we experience, and how our waking thoughts affect the dreams we experience.

Some experts believe that dreaming may help with processing our emotions. Therefore, it’s not uncommon to dream about momentous events that occur while we’re awake. So yes, a plot, scene, and/or characters (good or evil) developed during the daytime could certainly wriggle their way into a writer’s brain as they sleep.

There is a theory, the continuity hypothesis, stating that most dreams reflect the same notions that concern us while we’re awake. Analyzing those recurring dreams and images could help to identify our biggest worries and fears.

Some researchers theorize that dreams play a role in forming and storing memories, including long-term memory, by processing and sorting information received while we’re awake.

Overfitted Brain Hypothesis

It’s likely that our brains become so used to receiving ubiquitous data day-in and day-out that our minds become desensitized/overfit to the “same old-same old” routine of daily life. Animals under-sample their environment, which makes their brains susceptible to overfitting.

Problems caused by overfitting can be resolved by adding hallucinatory data to our thoughts as the brain goes about its business of learning.

However, the brain can’t truly fine-tune its learning while we’re awake because injecting the hallucinatory information needed to do so might cause or create unpleasant consequences. Therefore, the brain adjusts by having us dream when we’re asleep. Dreams and nightmares are the brain’s method of inserting hallucinatory information as a means of preventing overfitting.

The overfitted brain hypothesis suggests that dreams purposely insert random information into our brains to prevent the desensitization caused by the humdrum routines of our everyday lives. Professor Erik Hoel of Tufts University believes that “dreams happen to make our understanding of the world less simplistic and more well-rounded.”

Professor Hoel’s Overfitted Brain Hypothesis delves deeper into the mere function of dreams, though, such as exploring the notion that works of fiction are artificial dreams. Therefore, time spent reading and/or writing books or watching television is not simply a break from learning, but rather a necessary adjustment of our minds.


“It is the very strangeness of dreams in their divergence from waking experience that gives them their biological function.” – Professor Erik Hoel


Dreams and even nightmares are often great fodder for a story or scene. Sometimes, those nocturnal fantasies are absolutely bizarre and stressful, while other times they’re fun and exciting, or warm and comforting. Occasionally, our dreams involve wonky characters who zip around inside our minds as they go about doing whatever is necessary to move their stories forward. They’re often the perfect protagonist or antagonist for a book.

Likewise, some “characters” found in novels are equally suitable as cast members for appearances during our nocturnal bouts of shut-eye.

A questionable murder (top image), to say the least, is a perfect example of the characters who, for some reason, show up in my mind from time to time. However, these guys often come to me while my eyes are open and I’m wide-freakin-awake. Yep, my brain is a weird one. So are the other characters found inside my ever-working twisted mind. Such as …

The Renowned 100-Yard Em Dash

The em dash is perhaps the most versatile of all punctuation marks.


Whatcha’ Gonna Do ‘Bout the Puppies?

Colon owners consider semi-colons as mixed breeds, therefore they prefer to keep the two apart. This is to prevent an unfortunate encounter that could result in large litters of periods and commas.

Unfortunate encounters could produce large litters of periods and commas


Do You Have Your Ellipsis Glasses?

Punctuation marks have been known (in my mind) to join together to antagonize the sun.

Periods, in a grouping of three, join together to …


Braces for Junior

Braces are also known as curly brackets “{ }”.


Quotation Marks Have Places to Go!

Commas and periods always go inside the quotation marks in American English; dashes, colons, and semicolons almost always go outside the quotation marks; question marks and exclamation marks sometimes go inside, sometimes stay outside. ~ Grammerly 


Stop Shouting

It’s always best to listen to questions first, before responding


WHY???

 

November 26, 2022/by Lee Lofland
https://leelofland.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/questionable-death-1-copy-2.jpg 475 630 Lee Lofland https://leelofland.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/the-graveyard-shift-1.png Lee Lofland2022-11-26 08:40:472022-11-26 12:39:03Dream On: How Works of Fiction Can Prevent an Overfitted Brain
Courts, Darrell Brooks Trial

A Path of Evil and Carnage: Darrell Brooks Sentenced to Six Life Sentences Plus 762 Years

On November 16, 2022, Circuit Court Judge Jennifer Dorow sentenced Waukesha WI parade attacker Darrell E. Brooks, Jr. to serve six consecutive life sentences without the possibility of extended supervised release/parole. These six life sentences were for 1st-Degree Intentional Homicide of six people who were marching in the parade.

Judge Dorow also imposed an additional 762 years for multiple counts of Intentional Homicide with modifier – Use of a Dangerous Weapon, 6 counts of Hit and Run-Involve Death, 2 counts of Bail Jumping-Felony, and 1 count of Battery/Domestic Abuse.

At his sentencing hearing, Brooks delivered a long-winded, circuitous, rambling, and convoluted statement where he, for over two hours, professed his devotion to God and his love for his children whom he doesn’t live with nor support. He professed respect for Erika Patterson, a former girlfriend, and mother of one of his children, who he abused physically and mentally, including running her over with the same SUV he used in the parade attack. He’s currently standing trial for that charge among others in another Wisconsin jurisdiction.

He professed respect for the court (what a laugh this was since he quite often disrupted the proceedings and berated the judge, calling her a joke and accusing her of treason). He professed respect for two members of the prosecution team, but expressed clear disdain and that he had no respect for District Attorney Sue Opper. He said she “wasn’t that bright.”

When speaking of and directly to DA Opper regarding her role the trial, Brooks said,

Screenshot of Brooks making the “Am I angry” statement toward DA Sue Opper

Brooks continued with numerous excuses for and reasons why he’s a career criminal—a bad childhood when his mother worked two or three jobs. That they lived in poverty and their apartment was infested with insects and rodents and that live bugs were often found in their morning cereal. He mentioned growing up without a father, standing with his mother in the “welfare line” to receive milk and cheese, and that he’d been bullied and made fun of and experienced mental health troubles throughout his life.

He told the court he needed help for mental illness and would like to be sent somewhere where he could receive it in the form of medication. His implication was to be sent somewhere other than prison.

For the first time since the parade attack, Brooks did finally mange to squeak out an apology for what happened at the parade but not for the fact that he was responsible for it. It was not an apology to the victims for what he did to them.


Comments made by Darrell Brooks during sentencing statement.

“Not only am I sorry for what happened, I’m sorry that you could not see what’s truly in my heart.”

“I apologize for not showing people what they wanted to see.”

“I have to look at my life going forward. Not looking backward. I have to look at reality.”

“I’ve moved past the day of the actual tragedy of the day of November 21, 2021, but I have not moved past uplifting this community in prayer and will continue to until it’s my time to pass on.”

“To clarify, so there’s no misconception, none of us can go back and change what happened. We can’t. But that doesn’t mean that my life has to be defined by that. I’ve moved past the actual day.”

“Regardless of how anyone feels I will continue to pray for them.”

“This was not an attack. It was NOT an attack.”


Brooks cried when speaking about his daughter not being able to talk to him when she wants to do so. No mention, though, of the parents and sibling of the 8-year-old boy he ran down and killed. No words for the other people he murdered and their family members who would never again be able to talk to their husband, wives, grandmothers, sisters, and aunts. No mention of the dozens of people who suffered brain injuries, compound fractures, loss of and damage to body organs, weeks-long comas, PTSD, nightmares, were dragged through the street by his vehicle, slammed by the SUV and sent flying 30-feet trough the air, landing on the pavement or curb.

His “speech,” as always, was all about “ME, ME, ME.”

Brooks cried when speaking about his children not being able to see and speak to him when they wanted, but no mention of the families of the people he killed

Brooks went back to the mental health issue several times. However, after cutting off Brooks once he’d begun repeating himself multiple times in what was likely a classic Brooks move to stall the inescapable, Judge Dorow read aloud portions of reports written by four mental health experts who examined Brooks and his case. Each of the four stated that while Brooks had a personality disorder, in no way did he suffer from mental defect. He, they said, knew right from wrong and that he clearly knew what he was doing at the time of the attack. Mental illness was not a contributing factor in his violent behaviors.

Judge Jennifer Dorow speaking to Brooks

“There are many times, many times when good people do bad things, but there are times when evil people do bad things. Some people, unfortunately, choose a path of evil, and I think, Mr. Brooks, you are of those such persons. Frankly, Mr. Brooks, no one is safe from you. This community can only be safe if you are behind bars for the rest of your life,” Dorow said.

Judge Dorow then outlined all the reasons behind the sentences she was about to impose., which was …

COUNT 1: 1st-Degree Intentional Homicide

Total length of the sentence is LIFE IMPRISONMENT; 360 Days Sentence Credit; Defendant is not eligible for release to extended supervision. TOTAL RESTITUTION: $47,193.29 to EMC Insurance Company on behalf of the School District of Waukesha and $124,220.65 to the Crime Victim Compensation Program; COURT COSTS: $268; DNA SURCHARGE: $250.

COUNTS 2-6: 1st-Degree Intentional Homicide

Total length of the sentence is LIFE IMPRISONMENT; 0 Days Sentence Credit; Consecutive to Count 1 and each other; Defendant is not eligible for release to extended supervision. COURT COSTS: $268, per count; DNA SURCHARGE: $250, per count.

COUNTS 7-67: 1st-Degree Intentional Homicide with modifier Use of a Dangerous Weapon

IMPOSED SENTENCE OF: 17.5 YEARS OF IMPRISONMENT (Credit: 0 Days) 12.5 YEARS OF INITIAL CONFINEMENT 5 YEARS OF EXTENDED SUPERVISION Consecutive to: To any other sentence and to each other; Defendant is not eligible for Challenge Incarceration Program. Defendant is not eligible for Substance Abuse Program. CONDITIONS OF EXTENDED SUPERVISION: *No Contact with any victims listed in the Amended Victim Identification Key; *No Contact with Erika Patterson; COSTS: $268 per count; DNA SAMPLE AND SURCHARGE: $250 per count.

COUNT 68: Hit and Run-Involve Death

IMPOSED SENTENCE OF: 25 YEARS OF IMPRISONMENT (Credit: 360 Days) 15 YEARS OF INITIAL CONFINEMENT 10 YEARS OF EXTENDED SUPERVISION Concurrent to Count 1: Defendant is not eligible for Challenge Incarceration Program. Defendant is not eligible for Substance Abuse Program. CONDITIONS OF EXTENDED SUPERVISION: *No Contact with any victims listed in the Amended Victim Identification Key; *No Contact with Erika Patterson; COSTS: $268; DNA SAMPLE AND SURCHARGE: $250.

COUNT 69: Hit and Run-Involve Death

IMPOSED SENTENCE OF: 25 YEARS OF IMPRISONMENT (Credit: 0 Days) 15 YEARS OF INITIAL CONFINEMENT 10 YEARS OF EXTENDED SUPERVISION Concurrent to Count 2: Defendant is not eligible for Challenge Incarceration Program. Defendant is not eligible for Substance Abuse Program. CONDITIONS OF EXTENDED SUPERVISION: *Same as Count 68; COSTS: $268; DNA SAMPLE AND SURCHARGE: $250.

COUNT 70: Hit and Run-Involve Death

IMPOSED SENTENCE OF: 25 YEARS OF IMPRISONMENT (Credit: 0 Days) 15 YEARS OF INITIAL CONFINEMENT 10 YEARS OF EXTENDED SUPERVISION Concurrent to Count 3: Defendant is not eligible for Challenge Incarceration Program. Defendant is not eligible for Substance Abuse Program. CONDITIONS OF EXTENDED SUPERVISION: *Same as Count 68; COSTS: $268; DNA SAMPLE AND SURCHARGE: $250.

COUNT 71: Hit and Run-Involve Death

IMPOSED SENTENCE OF: 25 YEARS OF IMPRISONMENT (Credit: 0 Days) 15 YEARS OF INITIAL CONFINEMENT 10 YEARS OF EXTENDED SUPERVISION Concurrent to Count 4: Defendant is not eligible for Challenge Incarceration Program. Defendant is not eligible for Substance Abuse Program. CONDITIONS OF EXTENDED SUPERVISION: *Same as Count 68; COSTS: $268; DNA SAMPLE AND SURCHARGE: $250.

COUNT 72: Hit and Run-Involve Death

IMPOSED SENTENCE OF: 25 YEARS OF IMPRISONMENT (Credit: 0 Days) 15 YEARS OF INITIAL CONFINEMENT 10 YEARS OF EXTENDED SUPERVISION Concurrent to Count 5: Defendant is not eligible for Challenge Incarceration Program. Defendant is not eligible for Substance Abuse Program. CONDITIONS OF EXTENDED SUPERVISION: *Same as Count 68; COSTS: $268; DNA SAMPLE AND SURCHARGE: $250.

COUNT 73: Hit and Run-Involve Death

IMPOSED SENTENCE OF: 25 YEARS OF IMPRISONMENT (Credit: 0 Days) 15 YEARS OF INITIAL CONFINEMENT 10 YEARS OF EXTENDED SUPERVISION Concurrent to Count 6; Defendant is not eligible for Challenge Incarceration Program. Defendant is not eligible for Substance Abuse Program. CONDITIONS OF EXTENDED SUPERVISION: *Same as Count 68; COSTS: $268; DNA SAMPLE AND SURCHARGE: $250.

COUNTS 74-75: Bail Jumping-Felony

IMPOSED SENTENCE OF: 6 YEARS OF IMPRISONMENT (Credit: 0 Days) 3 YEARS OF INITIAL CONFINEMENT 3 YEARS OF EXTENDED SUPERVISION Consecutive to all other counts, but concurrent to each other; Defendant is not eligible for Challenge Incarceration Program. Defendant is not eligible for Substance Abuse Program. CONDITIONS OF EXTENDED SUPERVISION: *No Contact with any victims, or their families, listed in the Amended Victim Identification Key; *No Contact with Erika Patterson; COSTS: $268 per count; DNA SAMPLE AND SURCHARGE: $250 per count.

*COUNT 76: Battery/Domestic Abuse 

JAIL: 9 Months; 0 Days Credit. Consecutive to any other sentence; Costs: $243; DV Surcharge: $100; DNA Sample and Surcharge: $200.

*Restitution to be paid before Costs/Surcharges/Fees. Restitution/Costs/Surcharges and Fees to be collected from prison monies pursuant to statutory provisions.

*Court finds an order for an escrow account is appropriate under 949.165 for payment of restitution and court costs/fees/surcharges, and even for costs associated with prior or future legal representation, etc. under the statute.

Body Armor, Felony warnings, voting rights, and firearms warnings given. (Judge Dorow informed Brooks that as a convicted felon he is not permitted to possess body armor or firearms, and may not vote unless his voting rights are restored).

Clerk provided the Defendant with Notice of Right to Pursue Postconviction Relief with the case number filled in, as well as the Voter Ineligibility Notice and Acknowledgment.

*COUNT 76: Battery/Domestic Abuse – Brooks assaulted/battered his girlfriend Erika Patterson.

November 17, 2022/by Lee Lofland
https://leelofland.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/654.jpg 533 800 Lee Lofland https://leelofland.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/the-graveyard-shift-1.png Lee Lofland2022-11-17 17:06:332022-11-17 22:36:38A Path of Evil and Carnage: Darrell Brooks Sentenced to Six Life Sentences Plus 762 Years
Darrell Brooks Trial

Darrell Brooks Found Guilty of Intentional Homicide, and More: Sentencing Hearings Begin Tomorrow

Darrell E. Brooks, Jr., the man who drove his mother’s red Ford Escape SUV through a Christmas parade in Waukesha, WI, killing 6 people and injuring 61 others, was found guilty, by jury, of each of the 76 charges he faced as a result of the horrific attack.

After a three-week-long intense trial marred by Brooks’ near constant disorder, repeated interruptions, disrespect, distractions, and outlandish behavior, it took the 12-person jury less than three hours of deliberations to reach the guilty verdicts.

On October 26, 2022, Judge Jennifer Dorow began to read aloud the guilty verdicts, a thick stack of blue papers, one for each count. When the judge started to speak, Brooks, who represented himself in the case, was, for the first time, no longer the boisterous, unruly, obnoxious, and argumentative defendant who’d interrupted and attempted to delay the proceedings at every turn.

He must’ve sensed what was coming his way, knowing the evidence against him was enormously overwhelming—thousands of eyewitnesses, the incident, including the deaths and injuries, was captured on video and in still photographs and audio, DNA evidence confirmed his identity and placed him in the vehicle as did numerous people who identified him as the driver, and much, much more.

In lieu of his typically disruptive, loud, and bizarre demeanor, Brooks sat still and quiet, looking at the judge as she read the first, first degree intentional homicide verdict. His face was no longer animated with sneers, eye-rolls, frowns, and that out-of-place and insensitive cocky grin that sometimes split his lips when questioning some witnesses/victims and berating the judge. Instead, his features appeared as deflated, almost as if the street-hard persona was melting away, morphing into an expression associated with a sense of foreboding and impending doom and gloom. The wind was no longer in his sails.

As Judge Dorow read the second guilty verdict, Brooks bowed his head.

At the conclusion of reading the 2nd verdict, a family member of one of the victims killed by Brooks shouted, ““Burn in hell you piece a sh**,” The judge had the man removed from the courtroom and then continued with the business at hand. From that point forward, other than Judge Dorow’s voice and the occasional sounds of people crying in the gallery, the courtroom was practically soundless.

Near the end of the reading of the guilty verdict of count six of first degree intentional homicide (each count carries a mandatory life sentence), Brooks clasped hands and used them to rest his head. He continued to sit this way throughout the 20 minutes it took Judge Dorow announce the remaining verdicts, all of which were guilty.

Brooks didn’t interrupt the judge, something he’d done relentlessly throughout the trial.

At the conclusion of the reading of the guilty verdicts, Judge Dorow asked Brooks if he’d like her to poll the jury. He said yes.

Judge Dorow then had each jury member stand as she called their numbers, one at a time. She asked each juror the same question, “The verdicts read in open court, are those your true verdicts?” Each one confirmed their guilty verdicts.

While the jury members responded to the polling, Brooks raised his head slightly and looked toward them as they responded to the judge’s question.

When the polling was complete, Judge Dorow asked Brooks if was satisfied with the polling of the jury. He again lowered his head against his clasped hands and softly said,” No.”

Judge Dorow, apparently unable to hear Brooks’ response, said, “I’m sorry?”

Brooks, in a slightly more audible tone, again said, No.”

The judge immediately said, “The Court is satisfied with the polling of the jurors. The court now accepts the verdicts.” She then thanked the jury for their service and released them. And with that, Darrell E. Brooks, Jr. stood convicted of 6 counts of first-degree intentional homicide, with use of a dangerous weapon, 61 counts of recklessly endangering safety, with use of a dangerous weapon, 6 counts of hit and run, and two counts of bail jumping.

Judge Dorrow scheduled the sentencing for Brooks on November 15 and 16, which begins tomorrow with oral victim impact statements from 45 people, including 9 children under the age of 18. Brooks submitted a list of 9 people to speak on his behalf. His list includes his mother Dawn Woods, and his grandmother, Mary Darlene Edwards. Both are expected to provide their statements via Zoom.

Inmate Correspondence Form (ICF) to the court stating the 9 people who’re to speak on Brooks’ behalf at the sentencing hearing

Brooks will have 20 days after his sentencing to file a notice to appeal. He has indicated that he will do so.

Those killed by Brooks in the November 2021 parade attack were:

  • Virginia Sorenson, 79 years old
  • LeAnna Owen, 71 years old
  • Tamara Durand, 52 years old
  • Jane Kulich, 52 years old
  • Wilhelm Hospel, 81 years old
  • Jackson Sparks, 8 years old

The sentencing hearsing and victim impact statements will be available to watch live, on various social media and news sites, including Facebook, WISN News, YouTube, Court TV, and more. The hearing is scheduled as follows:

 

 

 

Of course, a quick Google search will provide more links and sites. If interested, you may also search for “Darrell Brooks Trial” to view the trial and recaps, as well as many videos of Brooks’ outlandish behavior.

Click here to view the Court’s official full case summary, all charges, citations, and court records/transcriptions for each day of trial.

*Note – the Court record is fantastic information for writers.


Brooks is scheduled for trial next week for other violent crimes in a different Wisconsin county.

His criminal history is extensive.

September 1999, Milwaukee County
Substantial battery/intentionally causing bodily harm, as party to a crime
RESOLUTION: Guilty/no contest in December 1999
SENTENCE: Two years in prison – which was stayed, three years’ probation, six months in the House of Correction


February 2002, Milwaukee County
Possession of THC, second-plus offense
RESOLUTION: Guilty/no contest in May 2002
SENTENCE: 50 days in the House of Correction with work release, license suspended for six months


January 2003, Milwaukee County
Resisting/obstructing an officer
RESOLUTION: Guilty/no contest in February 2003
SENTENCE: 20 days in the House of Correction

In 2005, in Reno, Nevada, he was charged with statutory sexual seduction and contributing to the delinquency of a minor after he impregnated a 15-year-old girl. He claims the girl told him she was 18. Brooks pled guilty and was required to register as a sex offender.


February 2010, Wood County
Strangulation/suffocation (with previous conviction), battery, criminal damage to property
RESOLUTION: Guilty to strangulation charge in April 2010
SENTENCE: Three years’ probation – which was stayed, 90 days’ jail time with work release


March 2011, Milwaukee County
Resisting or obstructing an officer
RESOLUTION: Guilty in May 2012
SENTENCE: 37 days in the House of Correction with work release


November 2011, Milwaukee County
Possession of THC, second-plus offense
RESOLUTION: Guilty in March 2012
SENTENCE: 180 days in the House of Correction with work release


December 2011, Milwaukee County
Possession of THC, misdemeanor bail jumping
RESOLUTION: Guilty in March 2012
SENTENCE: 180 days in the House of Correction with work release


July 24, 2020

Two counts of second-degree recklessly endangering someone else’s safety and another count of possessing a gun despite being convicted of a felony

RESOLUTION: PENDING

In this case, Milwaukee police officers responded to a home where a woman, either Brooks’ mother or grandmother, told them that Darrell Brooks had gotten into fight with his nephew and fired a shot at or near him.


2021, Milwaukee, WI

Second-degree reckless endangerment, battery and disorderly conduct

Just weeks before the Waukesha Christmas parade, Brooks was accused of domestic abuse when he used his vehicle as a weapon. This was the same red Ford Escape he used in the Waukesha parade attack. A 31-year-old woman who had a child with Brooks, the woman who was impregnated by Brooks when she was 15, told police that he came to her motel in Milwaukee on Nov. 2, where he yelled at her and took her phone. The woman we now know as Erika Patterson, then walked toward a gas station and Brooks followed her and told her to get inside his SUV. When she refused Brooks struck her in the face with his fist.

When Patterson turned and walked away, Brooks struck and ran her over with his vehicle, according to the complaint. Officers reported observing what appeared to be dry blood on her face, a swollen lip and “tire tracks on her left pants leg.”

Police subsequently went to Brooks’ residence and saw him getting out of the red Ford Escape. He ignored police commands to stop and ran into the home where he was arrested.

Brooks was booked into the Milwaukee County Jail on Nov. 3 and released on Nov. 16, after paying a mere $1,000 cash bail set by a judge. His release came just four or five days before he again assaulted Erika Patterson and then minutes later  he drove his vehicle through the parade.

The office of John Chisholm, the Milwaukee County district attorney, released a statement about the bail $1,000 bail saying, “the bail amount was inappropriately low in light of the nature of the recent charges and the pending charges against Mr. Brooks.”


Had the violent career criminal, Darrell Brooks, been held in jail on a higher bond amount, the lives of six people would have been saved, and dozens wouldn’t have been injured, physically and mentally. Instead, victims and their families will relive the horror of “that day”when the painful 1st year anniversary of the parade attack occurs on November 21, 2022, a few days after Brooks is sentenced.

#waukeshastrong

November 14, 2022/by Lee Lofland
https://leelofland.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Screen-Shot-2022-11-14-at-2.03.28-PM.png 550 592 Lee Lofland https://leelofland.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/the-graveyard-shift-1.png Lee Lofland2022-11-14 14:32:032022-11-14 14:32:03Darrell Brooks Found Guilty of Intentional Homicide, and More: Sentencing Hearings Begin Tomorrow

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