This addendum provides additional details about Junior Newell's extensive criminal history beyond what was documented in prior publications, including: an attempted arson in the early 1970s; threats made after purchasing a house Junior previously owned; the circumstances around his wife's death in 1982, which some suspect was not a suicide; his involvement in a shooting in 1984 where his father was killed; another attempted arson in the 1990s; a rape charge in 1995; and threats made to his niece in 2002 after a custody dispute. The details are intended to help law enforcement solve open or cold cases and assess Junior's potential role in an unsolved murder.
This addendum provides additional details about Junior Newell's extensive criminal history beyond what was documented in prior publications, including: an attempted arson in the early 1970s; threats made after purchasing a house Junior previously owned; the circumstances around his wife's death in 1982, which some suspect was not a suicide; his involvement in a shooting in 1984 where his father was killed; another attempted arson in the 1990s; a rape charge in 1995; and threats made to his niece in 2002 after a custody dispute. The details are intended to help law enforcement solve open or cold cases and assess Junior's potential role in an unsolved murder.
This addendum provides additional details about Junior Newell's extensive criminal history beyond what was documented in prior publications, including: an attempted arson in the early 1970s; threats made after purchasing a house Junior previously owned; the circumstances around his wife's death in 1982, which some suspect was not a suicide; his involvement in a shooting in 1984 where his father was killed; another attempted arson in the 1990s; a rape charge in 1995; and threats made to his niece in 2002 after a custody dispute. The details are intended to help law enforcement solve open or cold cases and assess Junior's potential role in an unsolved murder.
This addendum provides additional details about Junior Newell's extensive criminal history beyond what was documented in prior publications, including: an attempted arson in the early 1970s; threats made after purchasing a house Junior previously owned; the circumstances around his wife's death in 1982, which some suspect was not a suicide; his involvement in a shooting in 1984 where his father was killed; another attempted arson in the 1990s; a rape charge in 1995; and threats made to his niece in 2002 after a custody dispute. The details are intended to help law enforcement solve open or cold cases and assess Junior's potential role in an unsolved murder.
This is the third Addendum to the ebook that can be found here: http://books.google.com/books/about/An_All_American_Murder.html?id=HrQlAwAA QBAJ, and here: http://www.scribd.com/doc/212910173/An-All-American-Murder. The first Addendum can be found here: http://www.scribd.com/doc/218905173/Addendum-to-An-All-American-Murder. The second Addendum can be found here: http://www.scribd.com/doc/222872377/Addendum-2-to-An-All-American-Murder. 2
THERES NO END TO IT Bobby (Ned Beatty) in Deliverance In yesterdays Addendum # 2 I reported that Junior Newells criminal past apparently extended well beyond the incidents for which he was arrested or formally charged or convicted. Those incidents were listed in the original ebook. To briefly recap, they included the following prior to 1975: convictions and/or arrests for arson, wrongful influence of a minor, disorderly conduct, trespass, and discharging a weapon. His post-1975 record included convictions or guilty pleas for arson and domestic violence, and arrests for aggravated menacing and rape (the rape charge, in 1995, was dismissed). In the sections below I recount what I have learned or been told about these and other alleged incidents involving Junior Newell. In some cases the information is fairly detailed, in others it is sketchy. But even the softer information could conceivably help law enforcement authorities in Columbus or the Bessemer-Birmingham, Alabama area solve old crimes that remain on the books or in cold case databases. The information may also reveal a pattern of behavior bearing upon the renewed assessment by CPD of Juniors potential involvement in the Christie Mullins murder. Early 1970sColumbusAttempted Arson The first wife of Juniors brother, Tommy Newell, related an incident from approximately 1972 in Columbus, not long before she and Tommy divorced. Junior was staying with them and was supposed to sleeping in the living room. Tommys wife, Helen, was awakened by some lights and police car sirens. She went into the living room and didnt find Junior where he was supposed to be. Junior came running into the house and told her that if anyone asked, she should say he was sleeping in the house the whole time. It turned out he had burned the porch of a house in a nearby alleyway. The 3
fire was put out in time and no one died. The police never questioned Helen and Junior was never caught.
The 1976 Arson on Kanawha In 1977 Junior was found guilty by a Franklin County jury of having set fire to his house at 343 Kanawha Avenue so he could collect some $25,000 in insurance money on the dwelling. The fire occurred on October 3, 1976. The chief prosecution witness was a woman who was rooming in the house at the time. Junior tried to enlist her in the scheme to burn the house down. He offered to split the insurance proceeds with her to give her money with which to bribe prison officials to spring her boyfriend, Sylvester Sly Edwards, from the penitentiary. She declined. Junior also tried to enlist a neighbor man in the plan but he, too, declined. The woman who roomed there said that Junior burned the house himself. He used gasoline and she saw where all the flares were set up. She testified that Junior told her to move out of the residence the day before the fire. Junior was sentenced to serve two to five years in the Ohio Penitentiary. After Junior went to jail, the house on Kanawha (which was not completely destroyed in the fire) was sold in a sheriffs auction to a young married couple. The wife told me that they received a call from Junior while he was in prison. He told them it was my house and he threatened them with harm for having bought it. 1982 Death of Pamela Newell Junior was released from prison on the arson conviction in 1981. In January 1982 his wife, Pam, filed for divorce, and a month later was found dead in bed in their apartment in Columbus off Morse Road. The coroner determined that she died of a lethal overdose of secobarbital (a high-powered barbiturate sleeping pill). Her death was ruled a suicide, although some in her family have long suspected foul play. The incident is discussed at greater length in the original ebook. 4
One mystery about the case was that investigators could not find any of the secobarbitals, or the empty pill bottle containing them, that Junior said were in Pams possession. I recently learned why. According to Juniors then sister-in-law, Pamela Newells sister, Karen Sue Stainer, was over at the apartment just after Pams death. She asked Junior about the secobarbitals. He showed her that he had been hiding them in the back of a zip up Teddy Bear. It is not clear whether he was hiding them from his wife, or the police, or both. I have tried, without success, to locate Karen Sue Stainer, last known to be living in Central Ohio. According to Tommy Newells wife, Junior was jealous of Bob Joker Hutton, the man Pam had been seeing while Junior was in prison on the arson charge. Hutton also was present, and slept on the couch, the night of Pam Newells death. She was supposedly distraught that he was planning to marry someone else at the time. Hutton backed up Juniors story about Pam being suicidal that night. Tommys wife told me that Junior once tried to shoot Hutton, and that if it hadnt been for Tommy, Junior would have killed Hutton. Junior was mad at Tommy for preventing him from killing Hutton. Tommys wife thinks that this incident was after Pam Newells death, although if the motive was jealousy then it is more logical that it took place before. Hutton died in 2006 at age 52, in a Columbus hospital, apparently from a work-related injury. The 1984 Shooting Death of Alabama Newell In September 1984, Juniors father, Henry Alabama Newell Sr., was shot to death by a neighbor, Frank Elias Jr., as a result of what the newspapers reported was a feud between two West Second Avenue families. Alabama Senior was shot once at close range with a 12-gauge shotgun after he confronted Elias with a .32-caliber handgun. Alabama apparently confronted Elias after Junior was arrested on a charge of making aggravated menacing threats against Elias, saying he would run him off the road in a car. Junior was briefly jailed and released on bond on the aggravated menacing charge. He and his father then overheard a shouting match between Elias and Juniors common law wife, Linda, and her sister, Ronna Johnson, during which the two women 5
claimed that Elias clubbed them with a baseball bat. As Alabama confronted Elias with the handgun, Elias reached for a nearby shotgun and blew a hole through Alabamas chest. According to Eliass daughter, Junior then grabbed the handgun from his fathers dead, clenched fist and hid it in his home so as to make it appear that Alabama was unarmed at the time. Elias was never indicted for the shooting, evidently on the grounds that he acted in self-defense. Not long after Alabamas death, Junior left his common law wife (Linda Harper, a 23-year-old stripper) and moved back to Alabama. He met another woman there and fathered a daughter by her (they did not marry). According to this daughter, Junior told her mother that the feud precipitating the Elias shooting of Alabama Senior was the result of a drug deal gone bad. Efforts to locate Linda Harper or Ronna Johnson have been unsuccessful. Frank Elias died in 2011. Approximately 1995ColumbusAttempted Arson In approximately 1995, according to Tommy Newells second wife, Junior tried to burn down the house of a young couple and their invalid child. Tommy and his wife were living at the time at 1445 Irene Place in Columbus. Junior, unmarried at the time, was living with them. For some unknown reason, Junior wanted to burn the house of a man named Ralph, his wife (Diane or Diana Rock), and their young invalid son, who was nicknamed Pooh. The family lived a couple of doors away. However, Junior mistakenly set fire to the house next to this family. It burned to the ground. No one was injured. Junior was not caught. 1995 Rape Charge Police records indicate that in 1995, Junior burned an ex-girlfriends car, pled guilty to an arson charge, and spent time in jail for the offense. In December 1995, he was charged with raping the same ex-girlfriend, who said hed been stalking and 6
harassing her since getting out of jail, although the rape charge was eventually dismissed. Junior admitted to having sex with the woman but said it was consensual. The incident is potentially relevant to the question of DNA testing. The alleged victim was medically examined for any evidence of trauma arising from sexual assault, and none was found. However, the crime lab report indicates that slides/swabs of her underwear were tested for semen and spermatozoa were observed. I do not know whether any of this evidence has been preserved. 2002 Aggravated Menacing In October 2002, a warrant was issued in Columbus for the arrest of Junior Newell on charges of telephone harassment and aggravated menacing. The complainant was Juniors niecethe same one who has said that Junior confessed to her that he killed Christie Mullins. She explained to me the circumstances of the incident: she had been trying to obtain custody of Juniors grandson and away from his daughter, Judonna. The niece obtained custody and would not allow Junior to see his grandson. Junior called his niece and said he was gonna blow my house up, she said. She pressed charges. It is not clear how the situation was resolved, but it caused an estrangement between Junior and his niece that lasted until he was diagnosed with cancer about a decade later. After that he and his niece reconciled and she mourned his passing in 2013. Other Incidents As reported in Addendum # 2, Juniors daughter Judonna told me that she believes her father killed as many as five people: two in prison; Christie Mullins; a black woman in Alabama; and a prostitute. Her account of his alleged confession to her about Christie Mullins, and the incident involving the African American woman, are included in Addendum # 2. 7
This Addendum # 3 is being sent to CPDs Cold Case unit for any followup they wish to conduct. As always, anyone is free to contact me with pertinent information, at mullinscase@gmail.com. DATED: New York, New York, May 8, 2014
Celebrated Crimes (Complete Series – All 18 Books in One Edition): True Stories & Historical Accounts of Infamous Real-Life Criminal Events from the Past