Tag Archives: KUSA

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

Attorney dad of dead suspect possibly linked to prison chief's killing friends with Colorado governor

Attorney Jack Ebel testified before the Colorado Legislature two years ago that solitary confinement in a Colorado prison was destroying the psyche of his son, Evan.

When Jack Ebel‘s longtime friend, Gov. John Hickenlooper, was interviewing a Missouri corrections official for the top prisons job in Colorado, he mentioned the case as an example of why the prison system needed reform. And once Tom Clements came to Colorado, he eased the use of solitary confinement and tried to make it easier for people held there to re-enter society.

Now authorities are investigating whether Evan Spencer Ebel, who was paroled in January, is linked to the death of Clements, who was shot and killed Tuesday night when he answered the front door of his house in a rural neighborhood.

The bullet casings from that shooting are the same caliber and brand as those found at the site of a bloody gun battle Thursday between Evan Ebel and Texas law enforcement officers that ended with Ebel being shot and killed, according to court records.

Authorities said Friday they had not yet done ballistics tests on the shells to determine if the gun used in Texas was the same one used to kill Clements.

The car Ebel drove matched the description of the one spotted outside Clements’ house on the night of the prison director’s death. Authorities also found a Domino’s pizza delivery box in the trunk and a jacket or shirt from the pizza chain. Denver police say Ebel is now a suspect in the Sunday slaying of pizza delivery man Nathan Leon.

Hickenlooper confirmed his relationship with Jack Ebel to The Denver Post and KUSA-TV Friday evening and then in a written statement Friday night. State records show Ebel donated $1,050 to the governor’s 2010 campaign. But there’s no indication that Hickenlooper’s relationship with the Ebels played a role in the shooting.

Hickenlooper said he did not having any role in Evan Ebel‘s parole.

Although Jack loved his son, he never asked me to intervene on his behalf and I never asked for any special treatment for his son,” Hickenlooper’s written statement said.

State prisons spokeswoman Alison Morgan said Evan Ebel was paroled Jan. 28 as part of a mandatory process after serving his full prison term. He had most recently been sentenced to four years for punching a prison guard in 2008, according to state records.

Hickenlooper said he never mentioned Ebel’s name to Clements or anyone else connected with the prisons system. He said he only heard about the role of his friend’s son Thursday night.

“I didn’t know Evan was out,” the governor told The Denver Post and KUSA, adding that he called Jack Ebel after being told of the connection. “He was distraught, he was devastated. I’ve never heard him so upset, and he’s had some hard things in his life.”

Lt. Jeff Kramer of the El Paso County sheriff’s office said Friday evening that he was unaware of the relationship between Hickenlooper and Ebel’s father.

Jack Ebel did not return multiple phone calls seeking comment.

A federal law enforcement official …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Jessica Rocha, Colorado Mom, Uses Embarrassing T-Shirt To Punish Child (VIDEO)

By The Huffington Post News Editors

A Colorado parent used an arguably controversial method to teach a child a lesson: public humiliation.

Jessica Rocha of Fort Morgan forced her fiance’s 8-year-old daughter to wear a shirt to school that labeled her a thief, KUSA 9 News reports.

The girl — who has a habit of stealing, Rocha says — wore the T-shirt to school and was ridiculed by classmates, but Rocha told the news outlet that the girl’s behavior has since improved. She said more traditional discipline tactics haven’t been effective in the past.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post