Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - Crime Alert 11.15.24 | Man Shoots Ex-GF's Parents, Who Are Helping Her Leave Him

Episode Date: November 15, 2024

Scorned lover opens fire while ex-girlfriend moves out of their home. Drunken football fan punches a mounted officer's horse! For more crime and justice news go to crimeonline.comSee omnystudio.com/l...istener for privacy information.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 This is an iHeart Podcast. Crime Alert, I'm Nancy Grace. Breaking crime news now. Sue Ann Robeson breaks up with her longtime boyfriend, Hema Smajlevic, and decides to move out of their shared home. Sue Ann asked him to leave the home for a few hours while her parents, Ruth and Tony Robeson, come help her pack up. He leaves all right, but he doesn't stay away. He drives back by the home and opens fire. Both Ruth and Tony Robeson, the parents, shot in the head. Ruth dies. Tony hospitalized, fighting for his life. Nancy Sue Ann Robeson escaped the gunfire as she was upstairs in the Florida home when Smodzlewich opened fire. Her father is still in critical
Starting point is 00:00:45 condition. A GoFundMe for his medical expenses has raised over $16,000. Smadjlovich is currently being held at the Polk County Jail on a $750,000 bond, awaiting his next court date. A no-contact order has been filed between Smadjlovich and Robeson. The couple had no history of domestic violence. Hamza Smadjlovich, 24, now facing murder, attempted murder, and weapons charges. Horseback officers monitor crowds as Gator fans pour out of the Everbank Stadium after the Georgia Florida game. The officers form a line to keep people out of the street, but Emmanuel Jones is not following the flow of traffic. He walks between two mounted officers and punches one of the horses in the face. When the cop sees his
Starting point is 00:01:33 horse head snap up and back, he snatches Jones by the shirt and forces him to the ground. Emanuel Jones, 26, charged with disorderly intoxication and harming a police animal. Can you believe that? More crime and justice news after this. Now with the latest crime and justice breaking news, Crime Online's John Limley. Four individuals are now facing charges in connection with a deadly shooting at a Detroit street gathering that claimed two lives and left five others injured. The accused, 25-year-old Johnny Lee Marsh III, 22-year-old Eladio Garcia, and 18-year-old Alfonso
Starting point is 00:02:14 Anaya, were formally charged with first-degree murder, assault with intent to murder, and additional serious offenses. 22-year-old Amber McEntee has been charged with tampering with evidence and lying to police. According to the Wayne County Prosecutor's Office, the incident unfolded on Detroit's West Side just after 1.30 a.m. on November 3rd. Police were responding to complaints about a large crowd when they witnessed shots fired from a vehicle into the gathering. Officers pursued the vehicle and swiftly apprehended Garcia and Marsh. Anaya and McEntee were later taken into custody three days after the incident. The shooting resulted in the deaths of a 15-year-old Detroit boy and a 19-year-old
Starting point is 00:02:58 Southgate man. Five others between the ages of 16 to 18, sustained injuries. Investigators believe an argument may have preceded the violence. A probable cause hearing is set for November 19th, with a preliminary examination scheduled for November 26th. South Carolina's Supreme Court has not set a date for the state's next execution, as attorneys for four death row inmates requested a delay until after the Christmas and New Year's holidays. For more, we turn to Crime Online's Sydney Sumner. The four inmates have exhausted their appeals, but their lawyers argue that a holiday pot would allow defense teams and prison staff, who are managing multiple cases, to prepare for all necessary legal matters.
Starting point is 00:03:42 By law, South Carolina's Supreme Court issues death warrants with 28 days' notice, and recent guidance requires at least five weeks between executions. This interval helps ensure readiness of lethal injection drugs, the electric chair, or the firing squad, while allowing time for any last-minute appeals. The state resumed executions this year after a 13-year hiatus caused by the lack of lethal injection drugs, a shortage resolved when lawmakers passed a bill allowing drug suppliers to remain anonymous. Since then, two inmates have been executed, Freddie Owens in September and Richard Moore in November. A third, Marion Bowman Jr., was scheduled to be executed on
Starting point is 00:04:23 December 6th for the 2001 murder of Candy Martin in Dorchester County. Last Friday, however, passed without a decision from the Supreme Court on whether to proceed with Bowman's execution. In the meantime, state attorneys have argued that South Carolina has carried out executions around the holiday season before, noting five executions between December 4, 1998 and January 8, 1999. Thanks, John. Markeisha Sadlier, 21, lives with her adoptive parents, Pastors Amanda and Dan Sadlier, in their New York apartment. She lives there for support with her neurological disabilities and autism. Markeisha works a retail job but never leaves home without saying goodbye. Friday morning, she gets dressed, eats breakfast with siblings,
Starting point is 00:05:11 then goes back to her room. The next time someone tries to find her, she's gone, her cell phone purse and meds left behind. Law enforcement concerns she was lured from her home and believes she's in danger. Her family says it's highly dangerous for her to go without her meds after recent brain surgery. Markeisha Sadlier, 21, African-American, 5'8", 155 pounds, long skinny braids, clear frame glasses. Last seen wearing black pants, a blue jacket, white sneakers. If you have info on Markeisha Sadlier, now missing two weeks, please call NYPD Crime Stoppers, 800-577-8477. For the latest crime and justice news, go to crimeonline.com. And please join us for our daily podcast, Crime Stories. With this crime alert, I'm Nancy Grace.
Starting point is 00:06:08 This is an iHeart Podcast.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.