Tag Archives: Prosecutor Terry Curry

Indiana house explosion suspect pleads not guilty in murder plot

A judge on Wednesday entered a not guilty plea for a man accused of plotting to kill a key witness against him in a deadly house explosion in Indianapolis.

Mark Leonard, 44, is charged with conspiracy to commit murder for allegedly trying to arrange the death of a witness who told police Leonard confessed to the November explosion that killed two people. The conspiracy charge carries a penalty of 20 to 50 years in prison.

Leonard, his girlfriend, Monserrate Shirley, and his brother Bob Leonard are charged with murder and arson in the Nov. 10 blast. Teacher Jennifer Longworth and her husband, John, were killed in the explosion that also left 33 homes in the Richmond Hill subdivision so damaged that they had to be demolished.

Judge Sheila Carlisle set a possible jury trial date in the murder-for-hire case for June 3. Leonard’s public defender, Deana Martin, said the trial likely would be delayed.

Leonard asked a fellow inmate at Marion County Jail if he could put him in touch with a hit man to kill the witness, according to a police affidavit filed last week. The inmate, who Leonard believed belonged to a motorcycle gang, indicated he could help, and they drew up a contract agreeing that Leonard would pay a $15,000 kill fee on his release, the affidavit said.

Leonard later spoke on the phone with someone he believed to be a hit man, the affidavit said. The man actually was a federal agent.

Investigators believe Leonard and the others orchestrated the fatal explosion by removing a gas fireplace valve and gas line regulator so that the house filled up with natural gas, then set a microwave to start on a timer, sparking the blast.

The witness told investigators that Leonard had told him about the explosion a week before it occurred and that Leonard was already shopping for the Ferrari he intended to buy with the insurance money, according to a probable cause affidavit related to the original charges.

Prosecutor Terry Curry said in February he would seek life without parole for Shirley and the Leonards because a jury was unlikely to choose the death penalty.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Blast suspect pleads not guilty in murder plot

A judge on Wednesday entered a not guilty plea for a man accused of plotting to kill a key witness against him in a deadly house explosion in Indianapolis.

Mark Leonard, 44, is charged with conspiracy to commit murder for allegedly trying to arrange the death of a witness who told police Leonard confessed to the November explosion that killed two people. The conspiracy charge carries a penalty of 20 to 50 years in prison.

Leonard, his girlfriend, Monserrate Shirley, and his brother Bob Leonard are charged with murder and arson in the Nov. 10 blast. Teacher Jennifer Longworth and her husband, John, were killed in the explosion that also left 33 homes in the Richmond Hill subdivision so damaged that they had to be demolished.

Judge Sheila Carlisle set a possible jury trial date in the murder-for-hire case for June 3. Leonard’s public defender, Deana Martin, said the trial likely would be delayed.

Leonard asked a fellow inmate at Marion County Jail if he could put him in touch with a hit man to kill the witness, according to a police affidavit filed last week. The inmate, who Leonard believed belonged to a motorcycle gang, indicated he could help, and they drew up a contract agreeing that Leonard would pay a $15,000 kill fee on his release, the affidavit said.

Leonard later spoke on the phone with someone he believed to be a hit man, the affidavit said. The man actually was a federal agent.

Investigators believe Leonard and the others orchestrated the fatal explosion by removing a gas fireplace valve and gas line regulator so that the house filled up with natural gas, then set a microwave to start on a timer, sparking the blast.

The witness told investigators that Leonard had told him about the explosion a week before it occurred and that Leonard was already shopping for the Ferrari he intended to buy with the insurance money, according to a probable cause affidavit related to the original charges.

Prosecutor Terry Curry said in February he would seek life without parole for Shirley and the Leonards because a jury was unlikely to choose the death penalty.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Prosecutor nixes death penalty in Ind. house blast

A Marion County prosecutor said Monday he won’t seek the death penalty for three people charged in a deadly Indianapolis house explosion because a jury is unlikely to choose that option.

Prosecutor Terry Curry announced he will seek life sentences without parole if a jury convicts Monserrate Shirley, her boyfriend Mark Leonard and his brother, Bob Leonard. All three face murder, arson and conspiracy charges in the Nov. 10 blast that destroyed dozens of homes and killed two people.

“If we go down a path that is easily a 10-, 12-, 15-year process, we want a pretty significant comfort level that at the end of the day it will result in the punishment requested,” Curry said. “Experience shows that the likelihood that anyone would ever be executed when a request for the death penalty is filed is highly unlikely.”

Indiana University law professor Fran Watson pointed out that until last week, when a Lake County jury recommended the death sentence for a Gary man convicted of killing his wife and two stepchildren, an Indiana jury had not suggested the punishment in three years.

The availability of life without parole also has made juries less likely to deliver a death sentence, she said.

Investigators say Shirley and the Leonards intentionally created a gas explosion in Shirley’s home in hopes of collecting insurance money. Thirty-three homes in the Richmond Hill subdivision on the far south side of Indianapolis were damaged so extensively they had to be demolished.

A microwave set to start on a timer sparked the explosion in Shirley’s gas-filled home, Curry said. Investigators determined that a gas fireplace valve and a gas line regulator in the house were removed. Investigators believe the trio also tried but failed to blow up Shirley’s home the weekend before.

John and Jennifer Longworth died after the explosion ignited another explosion and resulting fire at their house. Curry said he consulted with the victims’ parents, but declined to say if they supported his decision to seek life without parole.

Curry also announced new charges. The state has filed a motion to add a felony count of arson against all three defendants for damage to houses in the neighborhood that did not require demolition.

The state also requested a felony charge of insurance fraud against Shirley and felony charges …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News