Miami Herald

Serial killer confesses to murder that sent innocent man to prison

- BY DAVID OVALLE dovalle@miamiheral­d.com

Serial killer Samuel

Little confessed to the murder of a teen in 1977 in Miami. Another man did 22 years in prison after falsely confessing.

Notorious American serial killer Samuel Little has been identified as the murderer of two more women in Miami-Dade County — including one case in which another man served 22 years in prison before he was exonerated.

Authoritie­s recently concluded that Little murdered Karen O’Donoghue, whose body has never been discovered, in the early 1970s, and Dorothy Gibson, who was strangled outside a

nonprofit effort that has been a mission of the media company for almost 40 years. The goal, as always: to help some of South Florida’s neediest people by calling on the generous support of readers.

“Our annual Wish Book has always played an important role in addressing unmet needs in South Florida, a region with huge contrasts between the haves and the have-nots. The COVID-19 pandemic has made those needs greater, and those contrasts more stark,” said Rick Hirsch, the Miami Herald’s interim executive editor.

Pratt is humble, said Vanessa Griffin, the director of community services at Big Brothers Big Sisters of Miami, the agency that sponsored Pratt for Wish Book considerat­ion.

“She’s just this awesome woman and not looking for a handout,” Griffin said. But that doesn’t mean she can’t use a helping hand.

“She’s such a hard-working, committed grandmothe­r,” Griffin said. “Her daughter, the kids’ mother, has some issues with substance abuse and she keeps having babies and dropping them off to the grandmothe­r.”

GRANDMA RAISING FIVE GRANDKIDS ALONE

Griffin and Pratt both say the children’s mother really isn’t involved with them now.

“She might pop up once in a blue moon if I, say, remind her the kids have a birthday. She may or may not. She’s not really in their lives. The dads are definitely not in their lives,” Pratt said.

Griffin admires how Pratt, who drove buses for Miami-Dade Public Schools, has stepped up. But she needs a break.

“The grandmothe­r is not willing to let her grandchild­ren just be out there,” Griffin said. “I’ve asked her, ‘What would you like?’ She said she would like a two-week vacation but, ‘Of course, I can’t do that because I have the kids.’ No one could take care of her grandchild­ren.”

WHAT WOULD REALLY HELP

Griffin says the family could use some new living and dining room furniture. “Especially beds.”

Maybe some Christmas goodies like bikes for the oldest boy and girl, a laptop for the 6-year-old for school. Big Wheels for the 5-year-old and 3-year-old. Gift cards, perhaps.

And, oh, how lovely it would be to have the means to move into a fourbedroo­m, two-bath home. That would take money she does not have for a deposit.

Pratt acknowledg­es a larger home would be a godsend. Right now, she’s renting the home she’s had for 20 years — a threebedro­om, one-bath.

“There’s a lot of sharing. A whole lot,” Pratt said, laughing.

The home is, as you say, lived in. The kids are wellbehave­d. But they are, if anyone with children needs reminding, still kids. And that means a handful.

DEALING WITH DIFFERENT PERSONALIT­IES

“They are real talkative. I’m dealing with a bunch of different personalit­ies,” Pratt said. “That’s how I look at it. They have their own style.”

Pratt chuckles again. Laughter is life-affirming.

But life has become a bit harder with the COVID-19 pandemic and how it altered carefully constructe­d routines.

“Everybody was confined to the house but the kids went back to school because at first, at home, they weren’t doing so well. They wanted to go back,” Pratt said.

“Overall, they are good kids doing what kids do,” Pratt said. “The little boy, he’s 6, has a little challenge because he was a drug baby. He is having a little difficulty in school. Right now he is trying to do a little better in school and I try to get him some help whenever I can with his homework. I have a family friend tutoring him in the evenings.”

The oldest boy, Isiah, 13, just joined Booker T. Washington’s high school band, Pratt said. “The next little girl,” Oliviea, 10, “She’s not into anything right now. She likes dancing. Maybe if I could get her enrolled in some kind of dance class.”

There’s also Loyal, 6. Terylin is 5. Abigail is 3.

“I manage. We are surviving,” Pratt said.

Driving elementary school-age and high school-age children for 35 years in Miami-Dade has given this grandmothe­r a real perspectiv­e on the psyche of children. “I loved the job,” Pratt said.

“I just want to be able to live a while longer to see them grow up a bit, where they can fend for themselves, because their mom, she’s not into them. I just want the kids to grow up and be comfortabl­e and be able to take care of themselves, look out for themselves and look out for each other, and I want them to be close.”

Wish Book could make this a better season. Pratt says she is grateful for whatever comes.

“We must be grateful.”

WISH BOOK DURING THE COVID CRISIS

This year, the Wish Book challenge is bigger than usual.

“As one can imagine, needs are greater this year than ever before. Job losses, evictions, food insecurity due to COVID are all themes of the requests,” said Wish Book coordinato­r Roberta DiPietro. “Many of the nomination­s, submitted from social service agencies, also include medical equipment, service needs and some just some joy for the holidays.”

WISH BOOK READERS’ GENEROSITY

Last year, Wish Book raised $325,00 in cash along with $30,000 of in-kind donations. More than 750 people were helped.

For Wish Book 2020, DiPietro remains optimistic. Giving to others would be one way to end a year on a highlight, a year that many would like to put behind them. It would be a way to bring joy to Pratt’s family and many others that the Herald will introduce over the coming weeks.

“We are hopeful our readers can be counted on once again to be as generous as in the past to support the neediest in our community and bring a little bright spot into a neighbor’s life,” she said.

MAKING A DIFFERENCE

Last year, Wish Book helped bring light to people like David Anaya, a 6-yearold who had already spent half his life battling neurofibro­matosis, a genetic disorder that causes tumors that can be cancerous to grow on nerves.

David had a cancerous tumor on his optic nerve and was also diagnosed with autism.

What topped his holiday wish list was a laptop so he could do his schoolwork after he had spent more than a year undergoing chemothera­py. On Christmas Eve at his grandmothe­r’s house in Kendall, David excitedly opened his gifts, which included a laptop and a bicycle donated by readers.

Readers also met the Brown brothers, Marcelino and Jorge.

Marcelino Brown was diagnosed with post-traumatic epilepsy in 2012 after he was hit by a drunk driver while crossing a street. The seizures were debilitati­ng and cost him his job as a highway maintenanc­e worker for the state. He was turned down for disability and Medicaid. All he had was his older brother, Jorge.

They lost their Allapattah home to a rent increase. They lived in a car, which was later repossesse­d. They then rented a cramped Little River duplex studio. The brothers could barely afford that space, which led them to sell off their possession­s — including Marcelino’s prized Canon camera.

After their story ran, readers’ donations assisted with the rent — and provided a new Canon EOS camera for Marcelino, DiPietro said.

We also introduced readers to Elizabeth Minguez. She has multiple sclerosis, an autoimmune disease that affects the brain and spinal cord. MS rendered her unable to walk and in need of assistance at her Southwest Miami-Dade home. She dreamed of a scooter to give her some mobility, but spiraling insurance costs, co-pays and other bills for her care strapped the family financiall­y.

“Donations made it possible to provide her with a scooter that she needed,” DiPietro said.

 ??  ?? Samuel Little
Samuel Little

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States