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   alt.war.civil.usa      Discussing American civil war.. and 2.0      44,056 messages   

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   Message 43,534 of 44,056   
   It's Africoon Month Again! to All   
   HPD looking for more victims of black se   
   03 Feb 25 04:37:11   
   
   XPost: talk.politics.guns, houston.politics, talk.politics.misc   
   XPost: alt.abortion, sac.politics   
   From: february2025@jail.time   
      
   https://s.hdnux.com/photos/27/32/22/6136994/9/960x0.webp   
   Herman Ray Whitfield Jr. in 2009. Photo: Houston Police Department   
      
   Houston police on Tuesday for the first time identified a criminal suspect - a   
   possible serial rapist - from testing of sexual assault kits that once   
   gathered dust in the police property room.   
      
   HPD sex crime investigators said Herman Ray Whitfield Jr., 43, has been   
   charged with four counts of aggravated sexual assault going back to 1992, and   
   said he may have had more victims.One of his victims, police said, was a   
   12-year-old.   
      
   The identity comes one year after two independent labs began processing about   
   10,000 cases, including 6,600 untested sexual assault kits, that were stored   
   in the HPD property room. The city turned to an outside lab after DNA testing   
   at HPD's crime lab    
   was suspended when an independent audit revealed shoddy forensic work.   
      
   In February, Houston Police Department brass said partial results of a DNA   
   testing had not resulted in any false arrests. And while HPD confirmed the   
   testing had led to a number of arrests, they would not reveal the exact number   
   or identify any suspects.   
      
   "I don't think it's surprising. You have thousands of untested rape kits, and   
   when you start testing them you're going to start making connections," said   
   Mark Bennett, a veteran Houston criminal defense attorney.   
      
   "If there are rape victims who wouldn't have been raped if the authorities had   
   done their jobs properly, we should all be outraged by that."   
      
   Whitfield lived in the Sunnyside neighborhood of southeast Houston and is now   
   imprisoned in the Byrd Unit in Huntsville. He has been linked by DNA to four   
   rapes between 1992 and 1994 and between 2006 and 2009, police said Tuesday.   
      
   "He was very violent in his assaults," Sgt. John Colburn said. "He choked his   
   victims and would display a weapon or let them know he had one."   
      
   Women who saw photos of the 6-foot-3 Whitfield and identified him as their   
   attacker told police they didn't know him.   
      
   Whitfield was sentenced in 1994 to 30 years in prison for kidnapping and   
   served 12 years before being paroled in 2006, Colburn said.   
      
   He confirmed the evidence in the sexual assault cases was developed by DNA   
   testing by the independent labs.   
      
   From 2006 to 2009, Whitfield was living near Airport Boulevard and Texas 288   
   in the Sunnyside area but had several different addresses before being sent   
   back to prison in 2009 on a parole violation, according to officer Holly   
   Whillock.   
      
   At some point during his parole, Whitfield's DNA was entered into a national   
   database, allowing police to later link him to the four local cases, Colburn   
   said.   
      
   His victims ranged from 12 to 30.   
      
   Three of the assaults occurred before he went to prison: Dec. 15, 1992, 4300   
   block of Alvin; Feb. 16, 1993, 4300 block of Alvin; and Aug. 30, 1993, 4400   
   block of Wilmington.   
      
   The other charge stems from an attack on June 11, 2008, in the 4300 block of   
   Wilmington. In that case, police released a composite sketch of the attacker,   
   based upon the victim's description.   
      
   All the attacks occurred on trails, in bushes, in vacant lots or in vacant   
   houses. Whillock said the area was much less developed in the 1990s than it is   
   now.   
      
   Investigators said they believe others were attacked.   
      
   Last year, Mayor Annise Parker and the City Council agreed to spend $4.4   
   million in city funds and federal grants to send evidence for testing to two   
   nationally known independent labs.   
      
   Included were 6,600 kits of evidence taken from sexual assault victims that   
   were never tested, the oldest going back to 1987.   
      
      
   [continued in next message]   
      
   --- SoupGate-DOS v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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