Tv Serial Videos - Iran021.com| Persian VIdeo Center - 1. Popular Yaddasht Haye Yek Zaneh Khaneh Dar 51 - END. After the first four victims were found murdered in this way, the police declared that a serial killer was on the loose. A special task force was established to try and capture the killer. It was only after 34 more victims’ bodies were found that Sithole was finally brought to justice. 14734 - Reet, Petite, and Gone + Killer Diller (CLASSIC COMEDY) 14735 - Riding on Air + Road to Bali (CLASSIC COMEDY) 14736 - St. Benny the Dip + Swing It, Sailor! Serial Killer in Iran, The Forbidden Chapter (DVD) Trial of Iranian Terrorism in Germany (DVD) Shah from birth to End (DVD) Mirror of the Soul, Forough Farrokhzad Trilogy (DVD) Persian Nowruz Gold Clad Coin - سکه نوروزی.
![Taraneye madari serial killers Taraneye madari serial killers](https://persianv.com/photo/albums/ta-madari/Taraneye_Madari_15_893398.jpg)
Breaking News Emails
Get breaking news alerts and special reports. The news and stories that matter, delivered weekday mornings.
ByElizabeth Chuck
An Ohio truck driver who served time for killing a man nearly two decades ago is now facing charges in the deaths of four other people.
Robert G. Rembert, Jr. was indicted by a grand jury Tuesday for the aggravated murders of three people this year and a separate murder in May 1997, according to a press release from Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Timothy McGinty.
Rembert, 45, already served six years in prison after being convicted of voluntary manslaughter in the December 1997 shooting of Dadren Lewis, 24, in a Cleveland parking lot. Saint seiya movie 5 sub indo lets.
Tuesday's indictment included multiple charges — including murder, rape and robbery.
“Robert Rembert is a serial killer. So far, we know he’s purposefully executed five people,” McGinty said. “An investigation of his activities as an over-the-road truck driver is currently underway.”
Rembert was arrested after taking a shower at a truck stop in Medina County on Sept. 21, a day after Morgan Nietzel, 26, and Jerry Rembert, 52, were found dead with gunshot wounds to their heads in their Cleveland home. Rembert had been living with them — Jerry Rembert was his cousin, and Nietzel was a longtime family friend, according to Cleveland.com — and he had been driving Nietzel's car at the time of his arrest.
DNA samples taken in September opened up a trove of ties to other cases, prosecutors said. For one, the samples matched DNA evidence found in the murder of Kimberley Hall, a Cleveland woman whose body was found near an open field on June 10 by two workers. She had been strangled, beaten and raped, and the last phone calls on her cell phone were to Rembert.
Authorities also traced his DNA to the May 1997 murder of Rena May Payne, a 47-year-old Cleveland woman who was strangled and beaten. She was discovered in an employee restroom at a bus station. Rembert was a city bus driver at the time.
Rembert is being held on $1 million bond.
Elizabeth Chuck is a reporter for NBC News.
Born | Javed Iqbal 1956 |
---|---|
Died | 8 October 2001 (aged 45) Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan |
Cause of death | Probable suicide |
Conviction(s) | Child sex abuse Murder |
Criminal penalty | Death |
Details | |
Victims | 100 |
Country | Pakistan |
30 December 1999 |
Javed Iqbal Umayr[1] (8 October 1956 – 8 October 2001), was a Pakistaniserial killer who was found guilty of the sexual abuse and murder of 100 boys.
Serial Killers In America
Early life[edit]
Iqbal was the sixth of eight children of his businessman father. He attended Government Islamia College, Railway Road Lahore as an intermediate student. In 1978, while still a student, he started a steel recasting business. Iqbal lived, along with boys, in a villa in Shadbagh which his father had purchased.[2]
Murders, arrest, and trial[edit]
In December 1999, Iqbal sent a letter to police and a Lahore newspaper's chief news editor Khawar Naeem Hashmi confessing to the murders of 100 boys, all aged between 6 and 16. In the letter, he claimed to have strangled and dismembered the victims mostly runaways and orphans living on the streets of Lahore and disposed of their bodies using vats of hydrochloric acid. He then dumped the remains in a local river. In his house, police and reporters found bloodstains on the walls and floor, along with the chain with which Iqbal claimed to have strangled his victims and photographs of many of his victims in plastic bags. These items were neatly labeled with handwritten pamphlets. Two vats of acid with partially dissolved human remains were also left in the open for police to find, with a note claiming the bodies in the house have deliberately not been disposed of so that authorities will find them.[3]
Iqbal confessed in his letter that he planned to drown himself in the Ravi River following his crimes but after unsuccessfully dragging the river with nets, police launched what was, at that time, the largest manhunt Pakistan had ever witnessed. Four accomplices, teenage boys who had shared Iqbal's three-bedroom flat, were arrested in Sohawa. Within days, one of them died in police custody, with a post-mortem suggested that force had been used against him; allegedly, he jumped from a window.[4]
It was a month before Iqbal turned himself in at the offices of the Urdu-language newspaper Daily Jang on 30 December 1999. He was subsequently arrested. He stated that he had surrendered to the newspaper because he feared for his life and was concerned that the police would kill him.[3]
Iqbal was sentenced to death by hanging, the judge passed sentence saying 'You will be strangled to death in front of the parents whose children you killed, Your body will then be cut into 100 pieces and put in acid, the same way you killed the children.'[5]
Iqbal was found dead in his cell before the execution could be carried out.[6]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^'LAHORE: The story of a pampered boy.' Dawn. 11 October 2001. Retrieved on 26 May 2014.
- ^'Serial killer Javed Iqbal who sexually abused and killed 100 children in Pakistan' (Archive). India TV. Updated 26 February 2014. Retrieved on 26 May 2014.
- ^ abMcGraw, Seamus. 'A Letter from a Killer.' All about Javed Iqbal. Crime Library p. 4 at the Wayback Machine (archived 13 June 2003) (Archive).
- ^'Police detained after suspect's death.' BBC. Wednesday 8 December 1999.
- ^'Death for Pakistan serial killer.' BBC. Thursday 16 March 2000.
- ^'dawn.com'
Further reading[edit]
![Killer Killer](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/TibqVhUkVjY/0.jpg)
- 'LAHORE: Javed Iqbal, accomplice found dead in jail.' Dawn. Updated 10 October 2001.
- McCarthy, Rory. 'Killer's sentence: cut into 100 pieces' (Archive). The Guardian. Thursday 16 March 2000.
- 'Pakistan probes serial killer's death.' BBC. Wednesday 10 October 2001.
- 'Pakistan 'serial killer' under interrogation.' BBC. Friday 31 December 1999.
External links[edit]
- McGraw, Seamus. 'All About Javed Iqbal' at the Wayback Machine (archived 9 August 2003). Crime Library.
Serial Killer Lana Del Rey
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Javed_Iqbal_(serial_killer)&oldid=913211972'