Imperial Valley Press

Anthony Sowell, Ohio man who killed 11 women, dies in prison

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Anthony Sowell, sentenced to death for killing 11 women and hiding their remains in and around his home in a case that raised concerns about authoritie­s downplayin­g the plight of missing Black women, has died in prison of an illness.

Sowell, 61, had been receiving end-of-life care at Franklin Medical Center for a terminal illness when he died Monday, said JoEllen Smith, spokespers­on for the Ohio Department of Rehabilita­tion and Correction. The death was not related to COVID-19, she said.

Cleveland police were investigat­ing a rape case in October 2009 when they searched Sowell’s house and discovered two bodies. They eventually uncovered the remains of 11 women.

Most of the victims had struggled with addiction and died of strangulat­ion, prosecutor­s said. Some had been decapitate­d, and the bodies of others were decomposed to such an extent that coroners couldn’t be sure how they died.

In interviews with police, Sowell said he targeted women who reminded him of his ex-girlfriend, who had been addicted to cocaine and left him shortly before the killings began.

Neighbors had blamed a stench from the rotting bodies on an adjacent sausage factory, which spent $20,000 on new plumbing fixtures and sewer lines to try to make the smell go away.

The case was a moment of reckoning for Cleveland. Relatives of the slain women, who were Black, and many Black residents said police didn’t take the disappeara­nce of the victims seriously because of their race and troubled background­s, and complained about how o cers handled missing-person reports. Police said some victims were never reported missing.

In response, Cleveland police overhauled how they handled missing- person and sex crime investigat­ions based on recommenda­tions issued after the remains were found.

Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Michael O’Malley said his “thoughts and prayers” were with the relatives and friends of the victims of Sowell, whom he called a monster.

“My hope is that law enforcemen­t and the criminal justice system have learned from the mistakes that allowed this diabolical predator to go undetected for so long,” O’Malley said.

Joann Moore, whose sister, Janice Webb, was among the victims, said Tuesday that she was still trying to process a mixture of emotions.

“The ultimate goal was to see this through and see he got justice,” she said. “That was something else we weren’t able to see, him take his last breath.”

What happened more than a decade ago “was a tragic story for the city of Cleveland. It was a tragic story for us that this could go on,” she said.

“I still miss my sister. I know she’s watching down on her son and his kids, and her siblings,” Moore said.

Sowell “could have been stopped years before if we had done our job,” said former Cleveland City Council member Zack Reed, whose East Side ward included Sowell’s house. He said it was regrettabl­e the sausage company was never compensate­d for the upgrades it made.

Cleveland police failed to connect the dots and realize that missing women, many addicted to drugs and living on the fringe of society, had been murdered by one individual, Reed said Tuesday.

“We didn’t thoroughly investigat­e those missing women,” he said. “We didn’t take their families and the community seriously.”

Sowell was convicted in 2011 and sentenced to die for killing the women. He was also convicted of raping two other women and attempting to rape another. His execution had not been scheduled.

Sowell was a former Marine who had a brutal childhood and struggled with his mental health, John Parker, one of his defense attorneys, said Tuesday.

“He was not a monster and not evil,” Parker said. “He was damaged by childhood abuse and serious mental health problems. May he rest in peace.”

In 2014, ground was broken on a memorial at the site where Sowell’s victims’ remains were found.

In 2019, Cleveland settled a lawsuit filed by two of Sowell’s survivors. The women claimed that a police detective mishandled the investigat­ion of accusation­s against Sowell, allowing him to remain free and victimize more women.

Sowell had continued to appeal his case. As recently as May, a three-judge panel with the 8th District Court of Appeals unanimousl­y held that Sowell failed to present enough evidence that he did not receive a fair trial and that his trial attorneys ine ectively represente­d him during the penalty phase.

HOUSTON (AP) — A Texas death row inmate who raped and strangled a 77- year- old woman at her Houston home nearly 27 years ago has died after being diagnosed with COVID- 19, his attorney said Tuesday.

Jorge Villanueva, 66, had been receiving treatment for liver cancer when he recently tested positive for the coronaviru­s, said Jeremy Schepers, one of his lawyers.

Villanueva died Saturday afternoon at Hospital Galveston, a medical facility run by the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, said agency spokesman Jeremy Desel.

His death is under investigat­ion and an autopsy is being performed, Desel said.

While a formal cause of death has not been confirmed, Schepers said in an email that hospital records “indicate that COVID-19 is the presumed, but as of yet unconfirme­d, cause of death.”

Villanueva, who had been on death row for nearly 25 years, did not have an execution date at the time of his death.

Villanueva was convicted of the August 1994 slaying of Maria Jova Montiel.

Prosecutor­s said forensic evidence tied Villanueva to the crime. He also gave a confession to police in which he acknowledg­ed going to Montiel’s house to sexually assault her, and hitting her on the head with a bottle after she fought back. According to court records, “the large amount of blood throughout the bedroom, indicated that she had been violently assaulted before she died of asphyxia.”

At his trial, Villanueva’s attorneys had argued he should be spared a death sentence, describing him as a “family man who had killed because of his heroin and alcohol use.”

Villanueva’s death was first made public on Monday by a reporter with The Marshall Project.

According to a collaborat­ion between The Associated Press and The Marshall Project exploring the state of the U.S. prison system in the coronaviru­s pandemic, there have been at least 2,359 deaths from the coronaviru­s among prisoners.

In Texas, 187 inmates have been confirmed or presumed to have died from COVID-19, according the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. Thirty-seven agency employees are presumed to have died from the virus.

 ?? AP PHOTO/AMY SANCETTA ?? In this 2011 file photo, Anthony Sowell appears in court in Cleveland. Sowell, an Ohio man sentenced to death for killing 11 women and hiding their remains in and around his home has died in prison.
AP PHOTO/AMY SANCETTA In this 2011 file photo, Anthony Sowell appears in court in Cleveland. Sowell, an Ohio man sentenced to death for killing 11 women and hiding their remains in and around his home has died in prison.
 ?? Texas Department of Criminal Justice photo via AP ?? This undated photo provided by the Texas Department of Criminal Justice shows Jorge Villanueva, a Texas death row inmate who had been convicted of raping, beating and strangling a 77-year-old woman at her Houston home nearly 27 years ago.
Texas Department of Criminal Justice photo via AP This undated photo provided by the Texas Department of Criminal Justice shows Jorge Villanueva, a Texas death row inmate who had been convicted of raping, beating and strangling a 77-year-old woman at her Houston home nearly 27 years ago.

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