Tag Archives: Evan Ebel

Colorado police arrest second man in prison chief's death

Authorities say a second white supremacist prison gang member whose name surfaced during an investigation into the slaying of Colorado’s prisons chief has been arrested.

El Paso County sheriff’s officials say Colorado Springs authorities arrested Thomas Guolee around 5:30 p.m. Thursday. He was being held without bond for a parole violation.

Investigators have said Guolee isn’t a suspect in the shooting death of Colorado Department of Corrections head Tom Clements, but his name and that of fellow 211 Crew member James Lohr came up during the investigation. Lohr was arrested in Colorado Springs last week after a short chase and is now being held on charges including vehicular eluding.

Evan Ebel is the only suspect that has been named in Clements’ death. Ebel later died in a shootout with Texas authorities.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/national/~3/YxMT4Hu1Lrw/

Colorado officials find more court errors

Colorado court officials have found two more sentencing errors like the one that allowed Evan Ebel to walk out of prison four years early and kill the state prisons chief and another man.

Prison officials said Tuesday the new errors were uncovered during a review of five years’ worth of assault cases ordered by Gov. John Hickenlooper.

According to the Denver Post (http://tinyurl.com/d8x4hpk ), neither mistake resulted in any inmates being improperly released.

Authorities believe Ebel killed pizza delivery driver Nathan Leon on March 17 and shot Department of Corrections chief Tom Clements on March 19.

Ebel was killed in Texas during a shootout.

___

Information from: The Denver Post, http://www.denverpost.com

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Colo. officials order faster responses to parolees

Colorado parole officers must now respond to alerts from parolees’ electronic monitoring equipment within two hours, after a review that followed the death of the state’s prisons chief.

Parole records show that white supremacist gang member Evan Ebel slipped out of his ankle bracelet five days before Department of Corrections Director Tom Clements was killed at his home. Ebel is a suspect in Clements’ death.

Colorado’s governor announced a sweeping review of the state’s prison and parole operations last week. Corrections officials announced the change in its electronic monitoring policy Tuesday.

Investigators are trying to determine whether Clements’ slaying was an isolated attack or done at the direction of top members of the 211 Crew.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Alleged Colo. gang member held on $250K bond

A man believed to be a white supremacist prison gang member arrested in connection with the shooting death of Colorado’s prisons chief has been ordered held on $250,000 bond.

A magistrate set bond for James Lohr Monday as he made his first court appearance since his arrest Friday.

Lohr is one of two alleged members of the 211 Crew named as persons of interest because of their contact with gang member Evan Ebel, the only suspect named so far in the killing of Tom Clements. Thomas Guolee remains at large.

Lohr is held on suspicion of vehicular eluding, reckless driving and speeding.

Clements was shot March 19 while answering his door. Ebel was killed in a shootout in Texas and is also suspected in the death of a pizza deliveryman.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Police arrest member of gang linked to killing of Colorado prisons chief

Authorities arrested a member of a white supremacist gang linked to the killing of Colorado’s prisons chief, who was shot answering the door of his home last month.

James Lohr, 47, was arrested Friday by the Colorado Springs Police Department, Fox News confirms.

Lohr was wanted for questioning in the murder of Colorado Corrections Director Tom Clements. It’s unclear if Lohr has been charged.

Police continue to search for 31-year-old Thomas Guloee. Police consider him to be armed and dangerous with violent tendencies.

Authorities connected the two to Evan Ebel, who is suspected of killing Department of Corrections Director Tom Clements. Police say they are members of Ebel’s white supremacist prison gang.

Police say the two are not suspects but “persons of interest” in the killing.

Their names came up during the investigation into Clements’ death – the first official word that the 211 Crew might be involved.

Investigators are trying to determine whether Clements’ killing was an isolated attack or done at the direction of top members of the 211 Crew.

Authorities believe Lohr was in contact with gang associate Ebel days before the murders of Clements and pizza delivery man Nate Leon.

Police say they believe Ebel killed Leon and Clements before he was killed in a shootout in Texas. His motive in the killings isn’t clear.

According to the television station Lohr was arrested by Colorado Springs police after a short foot chase when police tried to stop a car.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Man arrested in Colo. corrections director killing

Authorities have arrested a member of a white supremacist gang linked to the killing Colorado’s prisons chief, who was shot answering the door of his home last month.

El Paso County sheriff’s spokesman Jeff Kramer says James Lohr was taken into custody early Friday. Lohr was wanted for questioning in the murder of Colorado Corrections Director Tom Clements. It’s unclear if Lohr has been charged.

Authorities believe the Lohr was in contact with gang associate Evan Ebel days before the murders of Clements and pizza delivery man Nate Leon. Police say they believe Ebel killed Leon and Clements before he was killed in a shootout in Texas. His motive in the killings isn’t clear.

According to the television station (http://tinyurl.com/d8bj8vt ), Lohr was arrested by Colorado Springs police after a short foot chase when police tried to stop a car.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Colo. prison chief's wife choosing not to be angry

The wife of Colorado’s slain prisons chief says she could become enraged that a clerical error led to the early release of the parolee suspected in her husband’s death, but she chooses not to make it a focus.

Lisa Clements said on CNN‘s “Anderson Cooper 360” Thursday that being angry won’t bring back her husband.

Clements has said she and her husband were watching television the night of March 19 when the doorbell rang. Tom Clements was shot after answering the door.

Lisa Clements told CNN about the trauma of his death but provided no specifics about the shooting.

When asked what she wants people to know about her husband, Lisa Clements cited a Bible passage that describes light bursting through when darkness “overtakes the godly.”

“I think that scripture captures exactly what I would like people to know about Tom. That that horrific night and, you know, the sound of that doorbell and all that happened was just unmentionable darkness,” she said. “But I trust that people will see light coming through. They’ll see that a man lived a good life and people’s lives were impacted by that.”

Tom Clements joined the Colorado Department of Corrections in January 2011. His wife is a psychologist who oversees Colorado’s state mental health institutes.

Lisa Clements has said her husband of 28 years believed in the human capacity to change for the better and be “redeemed.”

“Tom loved to say that 97 percent of folks in prison will be our neighbors one day,” Lisa Clements told KUSA. “That was part of his everyday belief.”

The man suspected in Clements’ death, Evan Ebel, was released from in January, four years earlier than prosecutors intended.

Ebel was sentenced to a combined eight years in prison for a series of assault and menacing convictions in 2005. He was supposed to serve a four-year sentence on top of that after assaulting a prison officer. But because a judge didn’t say the sentence was to be served after his original term was finished, Ebel’s new sentence was recorded as running simultaneously.

“For the rest of my days, I could be angry that someone made …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Colorado governor orders audit of inmate records

Gov. John Hickenlooper on Thursday announced an audit to ensure the state’s prisoners are serving their correct sentences, two weeks after a parolee who was mistakenly released four years early was identified as a suspect in the killing of Colorado’s prisons chief.

The announcement came as authorities said they were looking for two other members of Evan Ebel‘s white supremacist prison gang. Authorities said the two men were not suspects but “persons of interest” in Tom Clements‘ death. Investigators are trying to determine whether Clements’ killing was an isolated attack or done at the direction of top members of the 211 Crew.

Amid that backdrop, state officials announced the audit and a review of state parole procedures by the National Institute of Corrections. Ebel had slipped his ankle bracelet five days before the Clements killing, but authorities did not issue a warrant for his arrest on parole violations until the following day.

During that time, police believe Ebel also was involved in the slaying of a pizza deliveryman and father of three in Denver.

Ebel was sentenced to a combined eight years in prison for a series of assault and menacing convictions in 2005. He was convicted of assaulting a prison guard in 2008 but a clerical error led his new four-year sentence to be recorded as running simultaneously to his others, rather than to start after they finished. As a result, he was released Jan. 28.

“The Department of Corrections will prioritize the review of cases with the greatest level of risk, going back 10 years, and reviewing the required consecutive sentencing,” Hickenlooper said in a statement. “The Department of Corrections will work with the attorney general’s office on any issues that may need further action.”

Meanwhile, the announcement Wednesday night that authorities are looking for two other 211 gang members was the first official indication of a possible tie to the gang.

James Lohr, 47, and Thomas Guolee, 31, aren’t being called suspects in Clements’ killing, but are considered persons of interest. Their names surfaced during the investigation, El Paso County sheriff’s Lt. Jeff Kramer said. He wouldn’t elaborate.

Authorities say the two Colorado Springs men are members of the 211 gang and have been associated with Ebel in the past.

Both are wanted on warrants unrelated to Clements’ death, and authorities believe they are armed and dangerous.

Ebel is the only suspect that investigators have named in Clements’ killing, but they haven’t given a motive. They have said they’re looking into his connection to the gang he joined while in prison, and whether that was connected to the attack.

“Investigators are looking at a lot of different possibilities. We are not stepping out and saying it’s a hit or it’s not a hit. We’re looking at all possible motives,” Kramer said Wednesday.

Investigators have said the gun Ebel used in the Texas shootout was also used to kill Clements when the prisons chief answered the front door of his Monument home.

Sheriff’s investigators said they don’t know the whereabouts of Lohr and Guolee or if they are together, but it’s …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Governor Hickenlooper Orders State Department Of Corrections To Audit Records Of All Inmates

By The Huffington Post News Editors

DENVER — Gov. John Hickenlooper on Thursday announced an audit to ensure the state’s prisoners are serving their correct sentences, two weeks after a parolee who was mistakenly released four years early was identified as a suspect in the killing of Colorado’s prisons chief.

The announcement came as authorities said they were looking for two other members of Evan Ebel‘s white supremacist prison gang. Authorities said the two men were not suspects but “persons of interest” in Tom Clements‘ death. Investigators are trying to determine whether Clements’ killing was an isolated attack or done at the direction of top members of the 211 Crew.

Read More…
More on Denver News

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

2 more sought in Colo. Prison chief's death

Two more men connected to a violent white supremacist gang are being sought in connection with the slaying of Colorado’s prisons chief, and authorities are warning officers that they are armed and dangerous.

The search comes about two weeks after prison gang member Evan Ebel — a suspect in the death of Department of Corrections chief Tom Clements on March 19 and of Nathan Leon, a pizza deliveryman, two days earlier — was killed in a shootout with Texas deputies.

While it’s not clear whether the gang, the 211 Crew, is linked to the killing, the warning bulletin issued late Wednesday by the El Paso County Sheriff’s Department is the first official word that other gang members may be involved.

James Lohr, 47, and Thomas Guolee, 31, aren’t being called suspects in Clements’ death, but their names have surfaced during the investigation, El Paso County sheriff’s Lt. Jeff Kramer said. He wouldn’t elaborate.

Kramer said the two are known associates of the 211 gang.

Ebel is the only suspect that investigators have named in Clements’ death, but they haven’t given a motive. They have said they’re looking into his connection to the gang he joined while in prison, and whether that was connected to the attack.

“Investigators are looking at a lot of different possibilities. We are not stepping out and saying it’s a hit or it’s not a hit. We’re looking at all possible motives,” Kramer said Wednesday.

Investigators have said the gun Ebel used in the Texas shootout was also used to kill Clements when the prisons chief answered the front door of his home.

Sheriff’s investigators said they don’t know the whereabouts of Lohr and Guolee or if they are together, but Kramer said it’s possible one or both of them could be headed to Nevada or Texas.

Both are wanted on warrants unrelated to Clements’ death, and authorities believe they are armed and dangerous.

Guolee is a parolee who served time for intimidating a witness and giving a pawnbroker false information, among other charges, court records show. Lohr was being sought on warrants out of Las Animas County for a bail violation and a violation of a protection order, according to court records.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

2 white supremacist gang members sought in Colorado prisons chief death

Authorities investigating the death of Colorado’s prisons chief have issued an alert seeking two members of a white supremacist prison gang.

El Paso County sheriff’s Lt. Jeff Kramer said Wednesday that deputies are seeking 47-year-old James Lohr and 31-year-old Thomas Guolee in connection with the death of Tom Clements. He says their names surfaced during the investigation and the men could be headed to Nevada or Texas.

The Denver Post reports both men are members of the white supremacist prison gang 211 Crew. That’s the same gang whose members included Evan Ebel, who is suspected in the fatal shootings of Clements on March 19 and of a pizza delivery driver two days earlier.

Ebel was killed in a shootout with Texas authorities after their deaths.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Colorado white supremacist prison gang founder re-sentenced to 108 years

One of the founders of a white supremacist Colorado prison gang was re-sentenced Wednesday to 108 years in prison for gang activities behind bars, ruling out parole for a man the judge called “a thoroughly dangerous individual.”

Benjamin Davis was serving a 30-year sentence for robberies he committed when he was 19 when authorities say he helped start the 211 Crew. While in prison, he was convicted of charges related to his gang involvement, including racketeering and assault, and sentenced to 108 years in 2007. In February, the state appeals court ordered that a judge review whether the 38-year-old should serve the sentences back-to-back for 138 years total or 108 years, which might give Davis a chance at parole.

Judge William D. Robbins ruled Davis should serve the 108-year sentence on top of the 30-year sentence, noting that the robbery sentence had done little to deter Davis from breaking the law again.

“Mr. Davis over the last 20 years has endeavored to make himself a thoroughly dangerous individual,” said Robbins, who didn’t oversee Davis’ trial in the 2007 case. “….The long and the short of it is you don’t need to be out on the streets in 40 or 50 years.”

Davis, his heavily-tattooed arms shackled to his waist, asked Robbins to allow him to serve the two sentences concurrently, or at the same time, giving him an outside chance of parole if he lives long enough.

“I’d just like to point out I didn’t kill anyone,” he said.

A woman who said she was Davis’ sister leaned forward during the hearing and fought back tears, but she declined to comment after the hearing.

Another appeal is likely.

Davis’ public defender tried unsuccessfully to delay the hearing, saying Davis has been held in isolation for the last two weeks and wasn’t given enough notice to prepare for the re-sentencing hearing. She asked to be appointed to represent him for an appeal.

Davis was separated from other prisoners after the killing of Colorado corrections director Tom Clements to protect him because of media reports about the possibility that 211 leaders may have ordered his killing, corrections department spokeswoman Alison Morgan said. The only suspect in the slaying, Evan Ebel, was a 211 member and authorities have been looking into his ties as part of the murder investigation.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Sentence affirmed for Colo. prison gang founder

One of the founders of a white supremacist Colorado prison gang was re-sentenced Wednesday to 108 years in prison for gang activities behind bars, ruling out parole for a man the judge called “a thoroughly dangerous individual.”

Benjamin Davis was serving a 30-year sentence for robberies he committed when he was 19 when authorities say he helped start the 211 Crew. While in prison, he was convicted of charges related to his gang involvement, including racketeering and assault, and sentenced to 108 years in 2007. In February, the state appeals court ordered that a judge review whether the 38-year-old should serve the sentences back-to-back for 138 years total or 108 years, which might give Davis a chance at parole.

Judge William D. Robbins ruled Davis should serve the 108-year sentence on top of the 30-year sentence, noting that the robbery sentence had done little to deter Davis from breaking the law again.

“Mr. Davis over the last 20 years has endeavored to make himself a thoroughly dangerous individual,” said Robbins, who didn’t oversee Davis’ trial in the 2007 case. “….The long and the short of it is you don’t need to be out on the streets in 40 or 50 years.”

Davis, his heavily-tattooed arms shackled to his waist, asked Robbins to allow him to serve the two sentences concurrently, or at the same time, giving him an outside chance of parole if he lives long enough.

“I’d just like to point out I didn’t kill anyone,” he said.

A woman who said she was Davis’ sister leaned forward during the hearing and fought back tears, but she declined to comment after the hearing.

Another appeal is likely.

Davis’ public defender tried unsuccessfully to delay the hearing, saying Davis has been held in isolation for the last two weeks and wasn’t given enough notice to prepare for the re-sentencing hearing. She asked to be appointed to represent him for an appeal.

Davis was separated from other prisoners after the killing of Colorado corrections director Tom Clements to protect him because of media reports about the possibility that 211 leaders may have ordered his killing, corrections department spokeswoman Alison Morgan said. The only suspect in the slaying, Evan Ebel, was a 211 member and authorities have been looking into his ties as part of …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Colo. authorities probe how much gun buyer knew

Investigators are looking into how much the woman who bought the gun used to kill Colorado’s corrections chief knew about the slaying.

Twenty-two-year-old Stevie Marie Vigil made her first appearance in court Thursday in Centennial after being arrested for buying the gun and giving it to Evan Ebel, a felon who was barred from possessing a firearm. She was ordered held on $25,000 bond.

She faces one count of unlawful purchase of a firearm, a felony which carries a penalty of between two and 16 years in prison.

El Paso County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Sgt. Joe Roybal said investigators don’t know yet what Vigil knew about what Ebel planned to do.

Prosecutor Mark Hurlbert wouldn’t comment on whether other charges are being considered. Vigil’s lawyer left the hearing without comment.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

From a young age, no one could tame Evan Ebel

From a young age, no one could tame Evan Spencer Ebel.

His parents sent him to special camps in Utah, Jamaica and Samoa for children with behavioral problems. Neighbors in the middle-class suburbs west of Denver shied away from a kid they described as “a handful.”

By age 20, state prison had become Ebel’s home. There, he joined a white supremacist gang and ended up in solitary confinement, a place his parents believe soon began to eat away at his already troubled mind.

On Jan. 28, when his term was up, Ebel was set free.

Two months later, he is dead after a shootout with Texas authorities and is a suspect in the death of Colorado’s state prisons chief, who was gunned down when he answered the front door of his house. Investigators have said the gun used to in the Texas shootout was the same weapon used to kill Colorado’s prisons chief.

Now investigators are trying to piece together whether the final actions of the 28-year-old sprung from his own ideas or came at the direction of a prison gang — an idea some close to him reject.

His mother, Jody Mangue, says her son was more complicated than news media stories imply.

“He was not a follower by any means,” she posted in an online memorial site, suggesting that white inmates are often labeled members of such gangs even if they don’t join.

The Colorado Independent website quoted a former inmate and member of the prison gang who said Ebel had left the group and was having a hard time integrating back into society.

“He told me that he needed to release some anxiety,” the former inmate, Ryan Pettigrew, told the website, adding the killing did not seem like a gang hit. “He needed that violence as a release so he could calm down. He didn’t know any other way.”

Ebel’s parents haven’t returned calls to The Associated Press for comment. But stories from both can be found in an online blog that those close to the family have confirmed the mother wrote, and legislative testimony from the father, who had begged the state to change its solitary confinement rules.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Woman accused of providing gun used to kill Colorado prisons chief

The Colorado Bureau of Investigation agents on Wednesday arrested a woman accused of illegally transferring the gun authorities say was used to kill Colorado’s prisons chief.

Investigators believe Stevie Marie Vigil, 22, of Commerce City, legally bought the firearm from a licensed dealer in the Denver suburb of Englewood and transferred it to Evan Ebel, who was a felon who couldn’t legally possess a firearm, the CBI said.

Ebel is suspected in the shooting deaths of Colorado Department of Corrections head Tom Clements on March 19 and of Nathan Leon, who was shot March 17 while working as a pizza delivery driver in the Denver area.

Ebel died after a shootout in Texas last week. El Paso County, Colo., sheriff’s investigators have said the gun Ebel used in the shootout was the same weapon used to kill Clements when he answered the front door of his home.

The identity of the Englewood firearms dealer wasn’t disclosed. Authorities described the dealer as “extremely cooperative” and said the dealer had no knowledge of Vigil’s alleged actions after buying the gun.

Vigil was being held on one felony count of unlawful purchase of a firearm. Her bail was set at $25,000.

Records associated with her arrest have been sealed, and an El Paso County sheriff’s office spokesman didn’t immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Woman tied to gun used to kill Colo. prisons chief

The Colorado Bureau of Investigation agents on Wednesday arrested a woman accused of illegally transferring the gun authorities say was used to kill Colorado’s prisons chief.

Investigators believe Stevie Marie Vigil, 22, of Commerce City, legally bought the firearm from a licensed dealer in the Denver suburb of Englewood and transferred it to Evan Ebel, who was a felon who couldn’t legally possess a firearm, the CBI said.

Ebel is suspected in the shooting deaths of Colorado Department of Corrections head Tom Clements on March 19 and of Nathan Leon, who was shot March 17 while working as a pizza delivery driver in the Denver area.

Ebel died after a shootout in Texas last week. El Paso County, Colo., sheriff’s investigators have said the gun Ebel used in the shootout was the same weapon used to kill Clements when he answered the front door of his home.

The identity of the Englewood firearms dealer wasn’t disclosed. Authorities described the dealer as “extremely cooperative” and said the dealer had no knowledge of Vigil’s alleged actions after buying the gun.

Vigil was being held on one felony count of unlawful purchase of a firearm. Her bail was set at $25,000.

Records associated with her arrest have been sealed, and an El Paso County sheriff’s office spokesman didn’t immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Gun in Colo. death matches Texas shootout weapon

Nearly a week after the chief of Colorado’s prisons was fatally shot at his front door, investigators have matched the gun in his slaying to one used by the prime suspect in a shootout with Texas authorities.

The weapon match was a small part of a puzzle that authorities in two states are trying to piece together after suspect Evan Ebel was killed in Texas. They have yet to determine who shot corrections chief Tom Clements or why he was killed.

And until investigators determine whether Ebel, who was recently paroled from Colorado’s prison system, acted alone, “it’s hard to know what his role was,” Lt. Jeff Kramer of the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office told The Associated Press.

“He remains a suspect in our investigation, obviously, especially after receiving this confirmed link from Texas,” he said. No other suspects have been named.

As investigators in Colorado and Texas worked to find more links, if any, Clements’ family and friends mourned a man who had been admired by prison advocates and guards alike.

“My life was changed forever,” his wife, Lisa Clements, told hundreds of people who gathered at a memorial service Monday.

During the service at New Life Church, she and Gov. John Hickenlooper spoke about Clements’ strong belief in redemption. His family said he decided as a teenager to work in corrections after visiting his uncle in prison, and he worked to reduce the use of solitary confinement in Colorado prisons.

Standing with her two daughters, Lisa Clements, a psychologist who oversees Colorado’s state mental health institutes, said her husband of 28 years would want justice as well as forgiveness.

“We want everyone who hears Tom’s story to know that he lived his life believing in redemption, in the ability of the human heart to be changed. He would want justice certainly but moreover he’d want forgiveness. Our family prays for the family of the man who took Tom’s life and we will pray for forgiveness in our own hearts and our own peace,” she said.

Clements had worked for 31 years in the Missouri Department of Corrections, both in prison and as a parole officer, before being hired in Colorado. He began a review of the state’s solitary confinement system and eventually reduced the number of prisoners being held in …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News