After several weeks in court, the public now has answers regarding suspected murderer Richard Allen and his involvement in the 2017 Delphi Murders. On February 13, 2017, Abigail Williams and Liberty German lost their lives at the hands of a brutal assailant. Since then, the world has watched and waited for the day their killer would be judged.
Opening statements began on October 18 and also featured testimonies from the victims’ grieving family members. Over the next 12 days, the prosecuting team presented evidence including graphic crime scene photos. The defense rested its case on November 6, allowing jurors to begin deliberation the following day.
Today in court, jurors found suspect Richard Allen guilty on four counts of murder for killing Abigail Williams and Liberty German. After seven long years, someone has been found guilty of the horrific 2017 crimes.
Indiana State Police Arrested Richard Allen In Late 2022
Back in October 2022, the world felt hopeful when Indiana...
Opening statements began on October 18 and also featured testimonies from the victims’ grieving family members. Over the next 12 days, the prosecuting team presented evidence including graphic crime scene photos. The defense rested its case on November 6, allowing jurors to begin deliberation the following day.
Today in court, jurors found suspect Richard Allen guilty on four counts of murder for killing Abigail Williams and Liberty German. After seven long years, someone has been found guilty of the horrific 2017 crimes.
Indiana State Police Arrested Richard Allen In Late 2022
Back in October 2022, the world felt hopeful when Indiana...
- 11/11/2024
- by Nikole Behrens
- TV Shows Ace
On Feb 13, 2017, teenagers Liberty “Libby” German, 14, and Abigail “Abby” Williams, 13 were dropped off near Monon High Bridge, a popular hiking trail in the small community of Delphi, Indiana. Their plan was to walk the trail before being picked up to go home. During their walk, German posted two photos on her Snapchat account, one of a bridge and another of Williams. It was the last time anyone saw the pair alive. The next day, authorities found their bodies in a wooded area several miles from the trail, sparking a years-long...
- 10/25/2024
- by CT Jones
- Rollingstone.com
When it comes to the case of the Delphi murders, authorities have been tight-lipped from the start. Since the Feb. 2017 slayings of friends Abigail Williams, 13, and Liberty German, 14, on a hiking trail in Delphi, Indiana, authorities have revealed little about the investigation, not even how the victims were killed. During the nearly six-year search for a suspect, they did release a recording captured by one of the girls on her cell phone that they believed showed the murderer: a man in jeans and a blue jacket ordering the young teens,...
- 11/30/2022
- by Andrea Marks
- Rollingstone.com
1953 was an important year for Marilyn Monroe. She'd been appearing in films since 1947, but '53 is when she became a star. That year, she appeared in three films for 20th Century Fox and one of them stands tall as defining her legendary screen persona: director Howard Hawks' "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes."
Monroe plays Lorelei Lee, the titular blonde and one of the film's two co-leads; the other is her brunette best friend Dorothy Shaw (Jane Russell). Lorelei is a bit ditzy and not shy about her expensive tastes (in men and otherwise), but there's no more loyal friend around.
Earlier that year, Monroe starred in the technicolor thriller "Niagara" as the murderous Rose Loomis, who conspires with her lover (Richard Allen) to murder her husband (Joseph Cotton). Hawks' film, though, was a musical comedy. Since she was playing a totally different type of character, Monroe needed to show a different side of herself.
Monroe plays Lorelei Lee, the titular blonde and one of the film's two co-leads; the other is her brunette best friend Dorothy Shaw (Jane Russell). Lorelei is a bit ditzy and not shy about her expensive tastes (in men and otherwise), but there's no more loyal friend around.
Earlier that year, Monroe starred in the technicolor thriller "Niagara" as the murderous Rose Loomis, who conspires with her lover (Richard Allen) to murder her husband (Joseph Cotton). Hawks' film, though, was a musical comedy. Since she was playing a totally different type of character, Monroe needed to show a different side of herself.
- 9/26/2022
- by Devin Meenan
- Slash Film
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