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  2. John F. Boyle Jr. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_F._Boyle_Jr.

    John F. Boyle Jr. John F. Boyle Jr., a former doctor from Mansfield, Ohio, was convicted for the murder of his wife Noreen in 1989. His case became highly publicized due to the nature of the crime, where he suffocated his wife and then entombed her body inside a home he owned in Erie, Pennsylvania. Despite the gruesome nature of his crime ...

  3. Jeffrey R. MacDonald - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey_R._MacDonald

    FCI Cumberland, Maryland, U.S. Jeffrey Robert MacDonald (born October 12, 1943) is an American former medical doctor and United States Army captain who was convicted in August 1979 of murdering his pregnant wife and two daughters in February 1970 while serving as an Army Special Forces physician. MacDonald has always proclaimed his innocence of ...

  4. Fatal Vision controversy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatal_Vision_controversy

    The controversy over Fatal Vision, journalist and author Joe McGinniss 's best-selling 1983 true crime book, is a decades-long dispute spanning several court cases and discussed in several other published works. Fatal Vision focuses on Captain Jeffrey R. MacDonald, M.D. and the February 17, 1970 murders of his wife and their two children at ...

  5. Wonderland murders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wonderland_murders

    The Wonderland murders, also known as the Four on the Floor Murders[1] or the Laurel Canyon Murders, are four unsolved murders that occurred in Los Angeles on July 1, 1981. [2] It is assumed that five people were targeted to be killed in the known drug house of the Wonderland Gang, three of whom—Ron Launius, William "Billy" Deverell, and Joy ...

  6. John Schneeberger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Schneeberger

    John Schneeberger (born 1961) is a North Rhodesian-born criminal who drugged and sexually assaulted one of his female patients and also his stepdaughter while working as a physician in Canada. For years, he evaded arrest by implanting a fake blood sample inside a plastic tube in his arm, which confounded DNA test results.

  7. Death of Joan Robinson Hill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Joan_Robinson_Hill

    The death of Joan Robinson Hill at 38 years old led to her husband, John Hill, becoming the first person to be indicted by the State of Texas on the charge of murder by omission. The case precipitated a series of events that included the 1972 murder of John Hill and, two years later, the fatal police shooting of the man accused of that murder.

  8. Deaths of John and Joyce Sheridan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deaths_of_John_and_Joyce...

    Coroner. Dr. Eddy Vilavois. On September 28, 2014, John Sheridan, a former New Jersey Transportation Commissioner and health care executive, was found dead along with his wife Joyce in their home in Skillman, New Jersey, United States. The bodies were found in the house's master bedroom by firefighters responding to a fire emergency, with both ...

  9. Murder of Teresa Sievers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Teresa_Sievers

    On June 28, 2015, 46-year-old Teresa Sievers was murdered at her home in Bonita Springs, Florida. Two men bludgeoned her to death with a hammer, striking her seventeen times. Police arrested Curtis Wayne Wright Jr. and Jimmy Ray Rodgers, both from Missouri, for the crime. In December 2015, Teresa's husband, Mark Sievers, was arrested and ...