"Sudden Heat": The Horrible Crime That No-one is R

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#1 "Sudden Heat": The Horrible Crime That No-one is R

Post by Lord Iames Osari »

Here's the story, in all its gory detail.

Yes, I know this is a LiveJournal entry, not an official news source, which means it's written with quite a bit of editorial bias, but I think it's important enough to share.
Bloomington, Indiana, is a hotbed of liberalism surrounded by rural struggles and conservative values in the Southeastern region of Indiana, two hours north of Louisville. If you are a gay man or woman, it is a Midwestern Mecca: Bloomington is one of the most gay-friendly cities, statistically, culturally, and economically, in the entire country. A city full of progressives, it prides itself on its pursuit of equality.

In Bloomington in 1999, a man named Won-Joon Yoon was ruthlessly gunned down outside the Korean United Methodist Church by a white supremacist in a horrific shooting spree that began in Chicago and ended with a total of 2 men dead and 9 others wounded, all from minority groups.

After that, black and white signs reading "Bloomington United in Diversity" on one side and "No hate! Not in our yards, Not in Our Town, Anywhere!" on the other went up all over the city like flags of mourning.

Yoon's death spurred a subsequent push by Bloomington and minority groups across the state to enact hate crime legislation in the state of Indiana -

- legislation which has never been passed.

Opponents of Indiana's proposed hate crime legislation wrote, "This bill represents an attempt to give special protection to homosexuals and cross dressers by stating that a crime against them is to be treated with more severity than a crime against a senior citizen, a child or a pregnant mom.."

As of 2007, Indiana remains one of only five states in the country with no laws whatsoever against hate crimes.

________


90 minutes southeast of Bloomington there is a town called Crothersville, almost literally a four-way stop with its own Stop-In Liquor store. Crothersville, as tiny as it is, made the national news two years ago after a ten-year-old girl was kidnapped, sexually assualted, and murdered. Everyone in Crothersville will tell you that everyone in Crothersville knows everyone else.

On the afternoon of April 12, 2007, a man named Aaron Hall (nicknamed "Shorty" because of his slight build and miniscule stature - he barely topped 5'4" and weighed around 100 pounds) met some fellow Crothersville natives, coming back from their Stop-In at the liquor store. 19-year-old Garrett Gray,18-year-old Coleman King, and 21-year-old Jamie Hendricks picked Hall up and went back to Gray's house, where they proceeded to drink and hang out.


From every indication from sparse news reports and word of mouth, it began as a verbal insult, maybe to Gray's dead mother, maybe to King's heterosexuality, maybe to nothing at all.

The 'why' will probably never be fully known to us. Whatever the details, Hall said the wrong thing. And sparked in Gray and King what the official Initial Hearing report termed a "sudden heat."

A "sudden heat" which would last throughout the next 24 hours.

Note: The following descriptions are graphic and disturbing, and may not be appropriate for sensitive readers.

# As King held Hall down while Gray punched him and struck him around his eyes repeatedly

# As King and Gray ruthlessly beat Hall, with fists and with the heels of their boots, hitting him over and over and over again, over 75 times with a boot alone.

# As the two of them took turns jumping on his battered body

# As they pulled his limp body down a wooden staircase, dragging him by the feet so that his head "bounced down all of the steps," in their own words

# As they propped up Hall between them, held out a camera phone, took a picture of the two of them with their arms around Hall's broken body, and proudly texted a photo of Hall's bloody and swollen face to their friend, James Hodge, where he worked, in order to show off their handiwork

# As Jamie Hendricks called Hodge back around 6:45 pm and declared, "They're beating the hell out of that guy," while Hodge listened to Hall's screams and the sound of King and Gray literally pummeling him to death

# Which they did for "several hours," spattering Hall's blood throughout the kitchen, on the outside deck, the railing, the stairs, and in the living room.

# As they piled his body into the back of Gray's pickup truck (spilling more blood) and continued to beat him while Hendricks drove them to the murder scene, a tiny field row off a deserted backwoods state road

# As Gray, still beating Hall, asked him if he wanted to die tonight. Hall, barely able to talk at that point, still managed to reply: no.

# As Gray and King, ignoring Hall's request to live, dumped him in the ditch beside the lane and proceeded to beat him still further.

# As they left him there lying in the ditch, by this time completely naked, only to return with a shotgun later at Gray's insistence that "they had to kill him or they would go to jail."

# As Gray shot into the darkness - but by this time, Hall, still alive, had crawled out of the ditch despite his naked body, despite his bruises, his broken nose and his shattered ribs. Hall had crawled into the field, where they left him there a second time.

# As Hendricks and Hodges returned the next day, April 13th, to the spectacle roadside attraction (and because Hodge wanted to steal Hall's coat) to find Hall dead in the field.

# As they all proceeded to wrap Hall's body in blue tarpaulin and hide it in Garrett Gray's garage, where it was found after James Hodge, perhaps realizing that turning stooge was his only way to avoid being listed as an assistant, reported the crime and the suspects to the police, who turned themselves in.

All in all, the "sudden heat" lasted just under ten days.



Shorty Hall's body was discovered on April 22, 2007, six days shy of his birthday.

He would have been 36.



On April 24th, 2007, twelve days after his death and two days after his naked, mutilated body was found wrapped in tarp in the Gray's garage, Gray, Hendricks, and King were formally charged. Hendricks was charged as an accomplice and allowed to post bail. Hodge was not charged at all.

No word on whether he got to keep Aaron Hall's coat.

The official cause of Aaron C. Hall's death remains unknown.

Garrett Gray's father is the Deputy Coroner of Crothersville. He has not made a statement about how he managed to miss the bloodstains all over his house in the ten days leading up to his son's arrest.

Shorty's obituary in the Jackson County Banner is heartbreakingly simple: He was a roofer. He loved mushroom hunting. He left behind a family who loved him, who left multiple tributes for him on myspace. His own myspace page states, "I'd like to meet the one I've always been looking 4.."

What he met was a brutal, horrific death.

Hall's death is made, astonishingly, even more horrific, because of two factors:

1) Apart from sparse articles in four local papers - The Jackson County Banner (bi-weekly), the Crothersville Times (weekly), the Seymour Tribune (daily), and the Bloomington Alternative (bi-weekly), no Indiana press at all has covered this case. Despite the brutality and the length of time during which the killing occurred, and despite the many unanswered questions about why the murder happened and how ten days managed to pass before the body was found, despite the disturbing similarities to the brutal, internationally publicized deaths of Brandon Teena and Matthew Shephard, there has been no press.

Which is why, a full two months later, you and I are only just now hearing about the murder of Aaron Hall.

2) During the ten-day lapse between the murder and the discovery of the body, the three suspects had plenty of time to come up with their only defense against their blatant and shocking brutality.

Their defense?

Hall was gay.

Nevermind that on the streets of Crothersville, where I went tonight, everyone understands that Hall wasn't gay, a statement echoed by his family. The defendants' motivation for beating a man to death for hours and hours, then driving him out into a pasture and beathing him some more, is "gay panic". He came on to them, so they killed him.

Why hasn't there been any press? The blogosphere seems to think that apparently, the lack of convincing support to justify Hall's sexuality means that this cannot be construed as a hate crime. And I guess it's not as snappy that way, or something.

So. Just another backwoods run-of-the-mill six-hour-long beating-a-man-to-death, then. Right.

________

At one point the Bloomington Alternative, who finally picked up this story in June and brought it to the attention of the blog world, and thus to me, calls Crothersville "stereotypically backwards, economically miserable and socially stunted."

But the Crothersville residents I talked to tonight (only one of whom would go on the record) have a very wry understanding of the much larger context at work here. "It doesn't matter whether he's gay," one teenager, a friend of King's, told me in the Back Lot, a hangout for teens in nearby Scottsburg. "Nobody deserves to have that happen to them." He spat on the pavement, then added, "Except child molesters."

Hate crimes in Indiana are not recognized by the law for what they are.

But there is no escaping the devastating implications of Aaron Hall's death for gay men and women across the country.

Either Aaron Hall was brutally beaten to death because he was gay, or else his murderers are attempting to exhort a sick sympathy from homophobic jury members by portraying beating a man to death as a natural response to homosexuality. Keep in mind that the "gay panic defense" has worked before. Keep in mind that with everyone I spoke to in Crothersville tonight commented on their complete lack of knowledge, the way that the case had been totally hushed up. One woman thanked me for giving her updates she hadn't heard. "I wonder what reason they'll actually give for what happened," she mused.

What reason, indeed.

___________

The first I heard of Aaron Hall's death was on Sunday night, from a friend. I needed a full day's worth of research just to figure out what had happened, so few and far between were the news reports.

The Indianapolis Star won't print this story. The Herald-Times won't print this story. The Associated Press won't print this story.

What did Matthew Shepard, what did Brandon Teena die for, what did Won-Joon Yoon die for, if a hate crime of this magnitude can be so completely suppressed that the general public knows nothing about it for two months?

What did Aaron Hall die for? And what will his murderers learn from their trial?

Will they learn that Indiana is a state where you can get away with murder, as long as you murder the right person in the right extenuating circumstances?

Will they hear the outrage that no one seems to feel? Will they take away the knowledge that even if they can tear the heart out of Crothersville without so much as a ripple of protest, they cannot and they will not silence the gay community, or make gay men and women into unwitting partners in their hideous murder?



Tell everyone you know about Aaron Hall. Tell everyone. Tell them that he was beaten over 75 times and left to die in a field like Matthew Shephard and the press has done nothing. Email your local paper and ask them why they aren't reporting the Aaron Hall story. Talk to everyone you know.

And remember him. Remember him, and speak out against hate.

No hate.

Not in our towns.

Not anywhere.
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#2

Post by Shark Bait »

I'd say more than just a bit of editorial bias, and quite honestly I don't think that having crimes against minority's classified as hate crimes is really going to help this. The people who killed him are violent sociopaths idiots the fault is not with the system, or the jury but with them. I think they probably would have come up with some other BS excuse or possibly even the same one even if there was a "hate crime" distinction".

Personally though i disagree with hate crime laws, i feel all cold blooded murder like this should be treated the same what if the killers had been say lone sharks and Hall owed them money? Its still a horrible murder, if your going to kill someone in cold blood your either completely disturbed, or you hate them regardless of WHY you hate them.
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#3

Post by Lord Iames Osari »

Personally, I'm ambiguous about hate crime laws myself. But the fact that this case is getting so little media coverage still strikes me as unusual and a bit unfair.
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#4

Post by Comrade Tortoise »

I am all for hate-crime laws, insofar as they protect every class of people. I find that killing someone for an arbitrary reason like "He is black" or "he was gay" is more heinous than other types of murder. A brutal murder for an economic reason like "He owned me money" or "I needed the insurance money to keep my house" is at least a motivation that, while sick and cold, is understandable to a degree.

A Hate crime is just unfathomable. It is a special kind of evil that needs to be punished more severely than crimes of passion, or economically motivated crimes.

And it IS fucking sick that an innocent person was beaten this brutally and the press has not touched it, preferring instead to talk about Paris Hilton.
Last edited by Comrade Tortoise on Mon Jun 25, 2007 2:48 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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#5

Post by The Cleric »

If we have "hate crimes", what, pray tell, is a "love crime"?

A crime is a crime. Period. End of story.
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#6

Post by Shark Bait »

What if i kill my neighbor because he blasts his music at 2 am and i hate him for it, or "he raped my wife/child/relative" and i hate him for that? Why is that not a hate crime? Its not the distinction between a crime of passion and premeditated murder if you kill someone in a horrific manner like this, you must harbor some sort of hate for them or have no moral compass whatsoever. if you want to make a distinction in the severity of a murder make it about the manner in how someone is killed, IE torture. If you torture someone to death (not for any particular reason) i can see that being considered more severe, which it often is in sentencing.
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#7

Post by Comrade Tortoise »

The Cleric wrote:If we have "hate crimes", what, pray tell, is a "love crime"?

A crime is a crime. Period. End of story.
A love crime is a crime of passion. It is a crime you commit under circumstances where a reasonable person can see themselves flipping out. Walking in and finding your wife with your brother for example.
Why is that not a hate crime? Its not the distinction between a crime of passion and premeditated murder if you kill someone in a horrific manner like this, you must harbor some sort of hate for them or have no moral compass whatsoever. if you want to make a distinction in the severity of a murder make it about the manner in how someone is killed, IE torture. If you torture someone to death (not for any particular reason) i can see that being considered more severe, which it often is in sentencing.
Different use of the word hate. The one you are using is not the definition used in legislation. Even someone annoying the shit out of you with music is a reason that we can understand on a rational level. It may not be the decision that we would have made, but damn there are some people that are so annoying you just want to hang them from a tree.

WIth murder for say, raping yours sister, that is something that many juries will acquit you for because "the fucker deserved it"

But there is no way to rationalize killing a gay, or black, or catholic person for being gay or black, or catholic. None. It is a murder based on the sort of baseless hatred that rightfully shocks the conscience more than the above crimes.

And I will be honest here. I have been the victim of these crimes (There is stuff I have not told you SB)

And I have had friends who have been the victim of these crimes. And the person who is assaulted is not the only victim. The entire community the victim belonged to is victimized. We are made to live in fear. Not many of you know what it is like to not feel safe going into certain places, not because the neighborhood is bad, but because you are afraid of being attacked for no real reason. Not many of you have to worry about say... showing affection publicly to a significant other because you are afraid of being beaten, or afraid to say, hit on someone you find attractive for fear of being tied to a god damn fence post.

Hate, or more appropriately bias crimes, are more heinous than an otherwise identical crime, due to their motivation, and victimize entire communities, not just individuals by creating a climate of fear that a crime of more "standard" motivations does not. This community victimization I would liken to the climate of fear caused by serial killers/rapists. And yes, I think that those crimes should be punished more strictly(if possible) for the same reasons.
Last edited by Comrade Tortoise on Tue Jun 26, 2007 1:23 am, edited 1 time in total.
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