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Quote7 people in custody in slaying of Fla. couple
By MELISSA NELSON and BILL KACZOR – 1 hour ago
PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP) — Masked suspects, some dressed as ninjas, stole a safe and other items during a deadly break-in at the sprawling Florida Panhandle home of a couple known for adopting children with special needs, authorities said Tuesday.
Melanie and Byrd Billings were shot to death Thursday in their nine-bedroom home. Escambia County Sheriff David Morgan hugged their sobbing adult daughter, Ashley Markham, at a press conference Tuesday to announce that three more people had been arrested, bringing the total to seven.
"It is my honor today to tell you, Ashley, and your family, we have found them and they are in custody," Morgan said.
Investigators had said previously that there were many motives for the crime, but prosecutor Bill Eddins said Tuesday that robbery was the main one. He would not say what was in the safe or what else might have been taken from the house.
Nine of the couple's 17 children were home at the time and three saw the intruders but were not hurt.
Morgan said investigators were still looking for at least one more person in the case and at least one of the suspects in custody may have done work at the Billings home. He has previously said the suspects had no direct connection to the victims.
Several of the suspects were day laborers who knew each other through either a pressure washing business or a car detailing group, Morgan said.
The arrests started Sunday with 56-year-old Leonard Gonzalez Sr., who was originally charged with evidence tampering but will be charged with murder, authorities said. He is accused of driving a red van seen on surveillance video pulling away from the Billings home and then trying to paint over it.
His son, 35-year-old Leonard P. Gonzalez Jr., was also arrested Sunday along with day laborer Wayne Coldiron, 41. Both were due in court Tuesday to face murder charges.
Another day laborer, Gary Lamont Sumner, 31, was arrested on a murder charge in a nearby county Monday after he was pulled over in a traffic stop. Morgan said investigators have placed Sumner at the scene, though he would not provide details.
Three more people were arrested Tuesday — a juvenile whom police did not identify; Frederick Lee Thorton Jr., 19; and Donnie Ray Stallworth, 28, who was arrested in Alabama but lives in Florida.
The break-in was captured by an extensive video surveillance system the Billings used to keep tabs on their children.
Surveillance video showed three armed, masked men arriving in the red van, entering through the front of the house and then returning to the vehicle. Others dressed in what the sheriff called "ninja garb" went in through an unlocked utility door in the back. They were in and out in under 10 minutes.
"I think you'll find this particularly chilling and here's why: We have a team that enters at the rear of the home and another that enters at the front of the home," Morgan said. "It leads me to believe this was a very well-planned and methodical operation."
Morgan said, however, that there was no indication anyone had unlocked the door for the intruders, adding that people in the community felt comfortable leaving their doors unlocked.
The couple owned several local businesses, including a finance company and a used-car dealership. They lived in Beulah, a rural area west of Pensacola, near the Alabama state line, in a house set deep in the woods. They had 17 children in all — 13 of them adopted.
Tips from the public led police to the van on Saturday.
Associated Press writer Tamara Lush in Miami contributed to this report
News reports show that the police caught all eight of these nasty thugs. They broke into a home, eight of them, killed the parents and robbed what ever. At first since it was reported that they had ninja suits on, so I wondered if there was something more than just robbery. But apparently not - just some dangerous, despicable, dumb sons of bitches, who now will rot in prison.
A sad story. This couple was willing to adopt and raise 17 kids with special needs and these dumb asses have to kill them over almost nothing. :mad:
I wonder if soon to be SC Justice Sotomayors "wise old latina woman" would make a good judge for their trial. I bet her "life experience" could really help her understand the pressure that forced these good day laborers into making such tragic choices.
Some old white dude will probably preside and send them all to the chair instead. And this is Florida - they take their death penalties kinda serious-like down there, don't they?
Quote from: Berkut on July 15, 2009, 01:48:54 PM
I wonder if soon to be SC Justice Sotomayors "wise old latina woman" would make a good judge for their trial. I bet her "life experience" could really help her understand the pressure that forced these good day laborers into making such tragic choices.
Clever insinuation, but one that founders on the reality that Somomayor is well-known as being a tough law-and-order judge with little sympathy for criminal defendants of any race or socio-economic status.
I have little patience for your nuance.
Just amazing though. These guys are pretty much regular dudes, workers, who just got together and decided to gang raid a home. Not some tough minded gang or something. Did none of them raise the questions of possible consequences, for them and for the family involved? And what all that could mean? Or are all eight of these guys just nasty enough to not care? I doubt that. I'm betting they were just eight screwballs who didn't think past the consequences and did something truly outrageous.
Greta Van Sustren will be busy for weeks.
Quote from: KRonn on July 15, 2009, 03:29:04 PM
I'm betting they were just eight screwballs who didn't think past the consequences and did something truly outrageous.
Of course, with 8 people on the job, you'd think they could manage to pull of the heist without needed to murder the two adults.
Quote from: KRonn on July 15, 2009, 03:29:04 PM
Just amazing though. These guys are pretty much regular dudes, workers, who just got together and decided to gang raid a home. Not some tough minded gang or something. Did none of them raise the questions of possible consequences, for them and for the family involved? And what all that could mean? Or are all eight of these guys just nasty enough to not care? I doubt that. I'm betting they were just eight screwballs who didn't think past the consequences and did something truly outrageous.
My assumption is that they just didn't think they would get caught, what with their OSSUM military-style operation. I assume your last assumption is correct.
Quote from: Berkut on July 15, 2009, 03:25:54 PM
I have little patience for your nuance.
We know. Since last year you've only been able to be vapidly trite. Like a retarded garbon.
English question: Is "special needs" a politically correct term for "disabled"?
Quote from: Zanza on July 15, 2009, 04:30:09 PM
English question: Is "special needs" a politically correct term for "disabled"?
Yes.
What I'm wondering is what they possibly hoped to obtain that was worth such an elaborate and murderous plan.
Quote from: Zanza on July 15, 2009, 04:30:09 PM
English question: Is "special needs" a politically correct term for "disabled"?
Yes, it can get confusing at times. For instance, Raz is a "special needs" case while Jaron is a "specially needy" case. They are both disabled in their own ways.
Quote from: Zanza on July 15, 2009, 04:30:09 PM
English question: Is "special needs" a politically correct term for "disabled"?
Disabled = gimp, special needs = retard.
Quote from: Malthus on July 15, 2009, 04:31:45 PM
Quote from: Zanza on July 15, 2009, 04:30:09 PM
English question: Is "special needs" a politically correct term for "disabled"?
Yes.
No.
I have recently learned all about the legalities of being disabled.
Quote from: garbon on July 15, 2009, 03:37:21 PM
Quote from: KRonn on July 15, 2009, 03:29:04 PM
I'm betting they were just eight screwballs who didn't think past the consequences and did something truly outrageous.
Of course, with 8 people on the job, you'd think they could manage to pull of the heist without needed to murder the two adults.
On the contrary. The more people, the harder to implement your Command & Control measures.
Especially with this kind of untrained rabble.
Quote from: Malthus on July 15, 2009, 04:32:34 PM
What I'm wondering is what they possibly hoped to obtain that was worth such an elaborate and murderous plan.
I think there will be a lot more to come along. Police are checking other people now, one a woman in real estate who may be the ring leader of this group. Saying this attack was practiced for a while; that someone was supposed to disable the surveillance camaers outside the home, and some other stuff that wasn't too clear to me as yet.