I hope the full story, including all who were party to the horrible crime, comes out one day. It's taken so long for the victims' family and loved ones to even get to this point. I hope nothing is botched by LE or the courts.
Are they going to arrest the EX-Husband? Do you even know where he is?
A woman accused in the deaths of three people in a Creek County cold case appeared in a Sapulpa courtroom Monday. Bristow resident Beverly Noe will be bound over for trial, a judge ruled. Wendy Camp, her 6-year-old daughter Cynthia and her sister-in-law Lisa Kregear were found buried more than twenty years after they went missing.
Noe faces three counts of first-degree murder in their deaths. Her brother, Grover Prewitt, is accused of being an accessory after the fact.
Prewitt was charged as an accessory to first-degree murder while Noe was later arrested and charged with first-degree murder after making "several revealing statements including information about the gun she used in the homicides."
On Monday, a judge ruled there was enough evidence for Noe to stand trial for all three murders. Her district court arraignment is scheduled for July 30 at 1:30 p.m.
The judge was told that a knife found in the grave had the brand name on the blade -- "Butcher Shop Knife." The brand is considered to be extremely rare.
An Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation special agent, Marty Wilson, said seven knives of that brand were found in a search this year of Beverly Noe's home...
A district attorney's investigator, Andrew Howard, told the judge he asked Beverly Noe during that interview why the little girl was killed. He testified she replied the girl was "damaged goods" and asked what else were they going to do with her.
Damaged goods. Good. Grief.[emoji35]
A district attorney's investigator, Andrew Howard, told the judge he asked Beverly Noe during that interview why the little girl was killed. He testified she replied the girl was "damaged goods" and asked what else were they going to do with her.
According to a Creek County judge, enough evidence was presented at a Tuesday preliminary hearing to bind over Noe for trial.
For a grieving family waiting more than 22 years for answers, it was a small victory. “We were doubting several times if this would ever happen or not, and we are grateful and very, very, blessed that it finally has arrived,” Camp’s mother Jackie Taylor said.
Leon Camp, who was Wendy’s husband at the time of her murder, was in the courtroom on Tuesday. He cried throughout testimony from others.
A Bristow woman pleaded not guilty Wednesday to first-degree murder in the 1992 deaths of three people whose remains were recovered from a makeshift grave last year in Pawnee County.
Beverly Noe, 67, entered her plea at a district court arraignment before District Judge Joe Sam Vassar at the Creek County Justice Center.
Vassar set her pre-trial conference for Aug. 13.
A Bristow man charged as an accessory in the 1992 slayings of three people whose remains were discovered last year waived his right to a preliminary hearing on Friday.
Grover Prewitt, 62, who faces a count of accessory to first-degree murder, appeared before Creek County Special Judge Richard Woolery, who scheduled Prewitt’s district court arraignment for Nov. 12...
Waiving a preliminary hearing typically signals that the defendant will ultimately take a plea deal. At a July preliminary hearing in Sapulpa, Grover Prewitt testified against his sister Beverly Sue Noe, 67, who faces three counts of first-degree murder in the deaths.
A woman charged with killing two women and a girl in 1992 whose bodies were found in a hole dug for a septic tank is due in court on Tuesday.
The Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation says Beverly Noe has been offered a plea deal and if it is accepted will plead guilty in court in Bristow.
No other details on the deal were made public.