Saturday, August 7

Mechele Linehan

Mechele Kaye Hughes,
(b. 12 October 1972 in New Orleans, Louisiana) was, for a time, an American convicted murderer. She is currently free after successfully appealing her conviction. She was serving a 99 year prison sentence for her role in the death of her former fiancé, Kent Leppink.
Early life and childhood

Her father, with the United States Air Force, moved the family often throughout her childhood. After her second divorce, her mother resettled the family near New Orleans, where she had relatives.
Linehan left home at age 16 and moved to New York City, where she hoped to work as a model. Instead, she worked at a Delicatessen in New Jersey that was owned by a man she was dating.
Kent Leppink's Murder

Kent Leppink was a Michigan native who moved to Alaska to work as a fisherman. He met Linehan at a Striptease club called The Great Alaska Bush Company. On 2 May 1996, he was found dead in Hope, Alaska with three .44 caliber bullet wounds. Just days before his death, Leppink had removed Linehan from his $1 million life insurance policy, and sent a letter to his parents stating that, should he meet with foul play, Linehan, John Carlin, or Scott Hilke probably had something to do with it.
Later life

Linehan married medical student Colin Linehan in 1998, and settled in Olympia, Washington. She earned a Master of Public Administration from the Evergreen State College, and operated a laser clinic where Colin worked.
Trial and Appeal

The prosecution alleged that Linehan followed the plot of The Last Seduction because she was "obsessed with the film." (Please Note: This specific point was one of the reasons for Ms Linehan's successful appeal) A former co-worker testified that Mechele told her that Linda Fiorentino's "character was her heroine and that she wanted to be just like her." The source for this testimony was the coworkers diary. After reviewing the diary there was an entry by the coworker stating she watched the movie with her boyfriend and not Mechele.[4] An insurance agent testified that Linehan tried to cancel the policy days before Leppink's death, then allegedly arranged for Carlin to murder him to collect on the policy. Carlin's son testified that his father had lied about not owning a .44 caliber Desert Eagle. Another witness also said that he sold a Desert Eagle in 1995, and left it at Carlin's house.
The defense argued that Leppink was an obsessive client who fabricated a romantic relationship with Linehan. Her friends and family stated that, given her history of volunteerism, such an act did not match her personality.[5] An ex-boyfriend of Linehan's, who painted a picture of Linehan as a gold-digger, was shown by the defense to be contradicting previous testimony made in 2006.
Linehan's sister, Melissa Hughes, reportedly living in the Czech Republic at the time of the trial, was arrested as a material witness upon returning to the US. She spent one week in an Atlanta jail for her refusal to testify against her sister.
Carlin was convicted of murder in April 2007. On 22 October 2007, Linehan was convicted of murder and conspiracy to commit murder. On 2 April 2008, she was sentenced to 99 years, and transferred to Hiland Mountain Correctional Center in Eagle River, Alaska.
On the 8 March 2008 installment of 48 Hour Mystery, Linehan told Susan Spencer: "I just feel like there is nothing I can do to make people believe me or make people like me.... Anybody else that knew me or worked with me didn't feel that way. You tell me how a 22-, 21-year-old girl can make grown men do these things." Carlin was found bludgeoned to death in his cell at the Spring Creek Correctional Center in Seward, Alaska on 27 October 2008.
In October, 2007, Mechele Linehan was convicted of the 1996 murder of Kent Leppink, a notorious case in Anchorage, Alaska that reached national attention on March 8, 2008, through a special episode of the CBS documentary show, 48 Hours Mystery. On April 2, Linehan was given a maximum sentence of 99 years in prison. Backstory Linehan met Leppnik when she was working as a nude dancer at an establishment called the Great Alaskan Bush Company. She claimed that while she received gifts and money from Leppnik, she was never in a relationship with him, and insists he was an obsessive client who imagined a relationship. However, evidence presented during the trial included a letter from Linehan to Leppnik in which she suggested marriage.
Prosecutors convinced jurors that Linehan had convinced her ex-boyfriend John Carlin, with whom she was living at the time, to kill Leppink in order to receive the benefits from a million-dollar insurance policy, for which Linehan mistakenly believed herself to be the beneficiary.
During the sentencing, a forensic psychologist testified that Linehan could not have committed the murder, and friends of Linehan's said that given her longtime vegetarianism and history of community involvement, they couldn't imagine that she would have committed such a crime.
The convictions had, however, been largely based on the testimony of Carlin's son, who said that he saw Linehan and Carlin washing a gun in the sink after the murder.
Linehan was represented on appeal by two Alaska lawyers, Jeff Feldman and Susan Orlansky. After the submission of briefs, the case was argued to the Alaska Court of Appeal in December, 2009. Less than 60 days later, on February 5, 2010, the Alaska Court of Appeals overturned Linehan's conviction. The reversal of the conviction concluded it was improper for Superior Court Judge Philip Volland to allow two pieces of evidence into the trial: testimony about the movie, "The Last Seduction," and a letter written by victim Kent Leppink in the days before he died. The letter, which Leppink wrote to his parents, said Linehan was the likely culprit if he ended up dead. Until May 11, 2010, Linehan was incarcerated at Hiland Mountain Correctional Center in Eagle River, AK. On April 28, 2010 a judge set her bond at $25,000.00.
On May 11, 2010, an east coast Corporate Executive and predictive modeler, Brian C. Watt, from Chester Springs, Pa, donated the money necessary to release Linehan from prison, paying a $25,000 one time bail bondsman fee.
Mechele Linehan was taken to an undisclosed location in Anchorage AK. Until early July 2010, Linehan was monitored 24 hours a day, by a series of third party court-approved custodian as a condition of bail. Since that time, the court has approved electronic monitoring of the accused, and removed the 3rd party custodian requirement, as a conditionality of bail.
Media reporting

On July 27, 2008, Linehan's case was profiled on Dateline NBC. An update aired on May 22, 2009.
On January 29, 2009, Mechele Linehan's case was profiled on the Oxygen Network series Snapped.
On June 6, 2009, Linehan's case was profiled as part of the E! network program "Fatal Beauty: 15 Most Notorious Women." The program re-aired on February 12, 2010, just one week after Linehan's conviction was overturned, without any change to the program.
HarperCollins has released a book on June 30, 2009 entitled "Deadly Angel: The Bizarre True Story of Alaska's Killer Stripper."



(source:wikipedia)

1 comment:

  1. why do these courts give 999 year sentences? its facking twitty..then in the treason filled uk they give you a life sentence of 11 years with parole and gold stars and total opposites..have to say I was taken by mechele linehans looks..no disrespect to the poor man dead..i don't know anymore than that..its just one picture after another of her and even dressed like a rock breaker I got the tingle..she really is a beautiful looker and I would love meet her? whats her address?

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