MogifiedXJ
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Tellico, TN
Some of my freinds over on pirate sent this to me...The guy killed an entire man's family while he is serving our country in Iraq and then proceded to burn them trying to cover up the evidence. The youngest kids where 3 and 5. Asshole is trying to blame it on alchol. You can read his blogs in the upper right page without being a myspace member...Hell is not enough of a punishment for this guy...
http://www.myspace.com/kokapelli81
SEATTLE - King County prosecutors said they plan to file aggravated murder charges Monday against the man accused of killing the wife, two sons and sister-in-law of a soldier serving in Iraq.
The four members of a Kirkland family had each been stabbed more than once in the neck. They were found dead in the two-story house that had been gutted by a fire, apparently set to cover up the killings, Police Capt. Eric Olsen said.
At a court appearance Thursday in Seattle, bail for Conner Michael Schierman, 24, was set at $4 million. Schierman was arrested Wednesday.
Schierman admitted waking up in the house after an alcoholic black-out, covered in blood, according to King County Deputy Prosecutor Scott O'Toole. Schierman also admitted setting fire to the house, O'Toole said.
Court papers say that when Schierman was contacted by police the 6-foot, 215-pounder had several defensive-type wounds to his face and neck and a puncture wound to his arm.
Schierman reportedly told police that he had recieved them while breaking up a domestic incident at at AM/PM market at 2:30 a.m. on the 18th, the morning after the murders.
Prosecutors say that surveillance video from the store proves him wrong.
National Guard Sgt. Leonid Milkin arrived back from Iraq on Thursday to see his burned-out home where his wife and two children and sister-in-law were killed.
The dead are Milkin's wife Olga, 28, their sons Justin, 5, and Andre, 3, and Olga's sister, Lyuba Botvin, 24, who lived at the house.
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Milkin has been on special assignment in Baghdad since September and is currently assigned to the 415th Military Intelligence Battalion, National Guard officials said.
Milkin spent very little time at the burned home in the 9500 block of Slater Avenue NE. He was taken to the back of the house by authorities. A few minutes later, he looked briefly at the growing memorial left by friends and neighbors nearby, and then left.
Source: Fire meant to cover up murders
On Wednesday, Kirkland Police detained Schierman in the neighborhood. Police believe the fire was set to cover up the murders, though they haven't determined a motive.
Meanwhile, Schierman's myspace.com page reveals a troubled family past, that included abuse. In a blog written June 25, 2006, he writes about how lucky he was to have "a job, a place to live, a wonderful family, and a growing network of caring, supportive friends.
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But he said "it wasn't long ago that I didn't care about any of these things. I didn't have a job or a home, I lived in my truck for a short spell (don't recommend it) I had my family but I pushed them away, same with my friends. I was a liar, a con man...I had a different face and set of emotions for each person I knew."
Schierman had recently moved in the neighborhood and that he previously had been a resident of a house for recovering alcohol and drug abusers and held a maintenance job, according to the Seattle Times
He matched the description of a person seen walking in the neighborhood where the fire occurred shortly before it was reported, the newspaper source said. A police dog also reacted to the presence at the suspect's house of an accelerant used to start fires, the source added.
Thursday morning police continued removing items from Schierman's home.
Also on Thursday a neighbor said she has seen suspicious activity in this duplex across from the Milkins.
-->StartFragment -->
There has been some suspicious things in the neighborhood lately, said neighbor Gaylene Tivis. These duplexes
http://www.myspace.com/kokapelli81
SEATTLE - King County prosecutors said they plan to file aggravated murder charges Monday against the man accused of killing the wife, two sons and sister-in-law of a soldier serving in Iraq.
The four members of a Kirkland family had each been stabbed more than once in the neck. They were found dead in the two-story house that had been gutted by a fire, apparently set to cover up the killings, Police Capt. Eric Olsen said.
At a court appearance Thursday in Seattle, bail for Conner Michael Schierman, 24, was set at $4 million. Schierman was arrested Wednesday.
Schierman admitted waking up in the house after an alcoholic black-out, covered in blood, according to King County Deputy Prosecutor Scott O'Toole. Schierman also admitted setting fire to the house, O'Toole said.
Court papers say that when Schierman was contacted by police the 6-foot, 215-pounder had several defensive-type wounds to his face and neck and a puncture wound to his arm.
Schierman reportedly told police that he had recieved them while breaking up a domestic incident at at AM/PM market at 2:30 a.m. on the 18th, the morning after the murders.
Prosecutors say that surveillance video from the store proves him wrong.
National Guard Sgt. Leonid Milkin arrived back from Iraq on Thursday to see his burned-out home where his wife and two children and sister-in-law were killed.
The dead are Milkin's wife Olga, 28, their sons Justin, 5, and Andre, 3, and Olga's sister, Lyuba Botvin, 24, who lived at the house.
-->StartFragment -->
Milkin has been on special assignment in Baghdad since September and is currently assigned to the 415th Military Intelligence Battalion, National Guard officials said.
Milkin spent very little time at the burned home in the 9500 block of Slater Avenue NE. He was taken to the back of the house by authorities. A few minutes later, he looked briefly at the growing memorial left by friends and neighbors nearby, and then left.
Source: Fire meant to cover up murders
On Wednesday, Kirkland Police detained Schierman in the neighborhood. Police believe the fire was set to cover up the murders, though they haven't determined a motive.
Meanwhile, Schierman's myspace.com page reveals a troubled family past, that included abuse. In a blog written June 25, 2006, he writes about how lucky he was to have "a job, a place to live, a wonderful family, and a growing network of caring, supportive friends.
-->StartFragment -->
But he said "it wasn't long ago that I didn't care about any of these things. I didn't have a job or a home, I lived in my truck for a short spell (don't recommend it) I had my family but I pushed them away, same with my friends. I was a liar, a con man...I had a different face and set of emotions for each person I knew."
Schierman had recently moved in the neighborhood and that he previously had been a resident of a house for recovering alcohol and drug abusers and held a maintenance job, according to the Seattle Times
He matched the description of a person seen walking in the neighborhood where the fire occurred shortly before it was reported, the newspaper source said. A police dog also reacted to the presence at the suspect's house of an accelerant used to start fires, the source added.
Thursday morning police continued removing items from Schierman's home.
Also on Thursday a neighbor said she has seen suspicious activity in this duplex across from the Milkins.
-->StartFragment -->
There has been some suspicious things in the neighborhood lately, said neighbor Gaylene Tivis. These duplexes
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