According to statements, the wife knew the killer too. I also was wondering where his wife was when the whole thing was happening. Seems like she would have been home that time of night. Initially I figured the wife was involved, for the insurance money, I know she's going to get. Turns out he has a new, younger wife that was at work herself. She is a policewoman with odd hours also. She had just spoken to him over the phone prior to his murder. So if she needed one. That alibi checks out. I think he was worth more to her alive than he is dead. So much for that angle.
An arrest was announced Sunday, less than a week after the murder happened. I knew it wouldn't take long, twenty-seven thousand dollars was raised for information leading to the killers arrest. For that kind of money, no one better know about your crime but you. If anybody knows they're going to sing like a bird. Which by the way, no one collected the money in this case. Eighteen year old Dexter Cox, who was one of Lt. Vidulich's neighbors. He lived within shouting distance of the victim. He has been charged with the crime after he was found with the officer's gun and also gave a confession. He is claiming it was self defense. According to his statement," the victim came at him wielding a knife." The next question I would have is " what were you doing at his house anyway?" It seems like him and the officer had some lefthanded dealings going on under the table. It appears there was supposed to be an exchange of money for something stolen in the break-in. Which bordered being a crime itself.
The inciters are already out in full force. They claim this young man actually has a case for self defense. For once I wish we were on the right side of something. It would be easier to understand somebody's viewpoint if they weren't robbing someone or commiting a crime themselves. In the commission of a crime you give up your rights. It looks to me like a case of extortion gone bad. Because he claims to have had pictures to prove questionable behavior. Has nothing to do with him being charged with murder. They're going to hang this young man out to dry. Unfortunately he's either very dumb, or calculating like Chief Godwin said. If his angle works he might get life in prison, as opposed to the death penalty. To me this is a no win situation for all involved. Those who have taken up this young man's cause aren't helping him. All publicity is not good publicity. In both instances this is a waste of life. I guess that's how the story unfolds.
Another fold has unraveled itself. I don't know the entire story, but I would bet I am right on this. Now we know how the weapon was connected to the other murders. Dexter Cox was there trying to sell back the gun that was stolen when the policeman's house was broken into.
ReplyDeleteThere are no pictures, that's just a smokescreen. I'll be waiting for them to appear.If by chance there are these unseen pictures everyone is talking about. That no one has seen but Dexter Cox the shooter. Any bargaining power Antonio Davis might have had is out the window now. The pictures only prove he broke in the house.
The reason they haven't charged Cox with the other two murders yet. Is because they already have him on lock. They're going to kill two birds with one stone. If these pictures ever show up. Guess who else is going to be charged with murder?
If Antonio Davis has any sense at all, he'll keep quiet. I would be willing to bet Javier Bailey is in this equation somewhere. More than Dexter Cox is going down behind this.
Accused in cop's death, teen began life of crime at an early age
ReplyDeleteBy Trevor Aaronson (Contact), Marc Perrusquia (Contact)
Monday, February 18, 2008
Natasha Rule thinks she knows who fired those five bullets through her bedroom window.
"Dexter," the 31-year-old woman said. "Dexter did it."
Mike Brown/The Commercial Appeal
Eighteen-year-old Dexter Cox appeared in court on Feb. 4 to face charges in the slaying of Memphis Police Lt. Edward Vidulich.
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Dexter D. Cox, the 18-year-old Memphian charged in the murder of police officer Edward Vidulich and suspected in the slayings of two other Frayser residents, lived for several years with his mother across the blacktop from Rule's house on Gillie Street.
Cox will appear in court today on a charge of first-degree murder. He has not been charged in the murders of Herbert Wooten and Gwendolyn Cherry Smith, whose killings police say are linked to Cox.
Although neighbors warned Rule that Cox was trouble, the young man never bothered her. It wasn't until September 2006 that the alleged killer's behavior concerned Rule. As she pulled her car into the driveway of her yellow-trimmed brick house, Rule noticed Cox and another boy near one of the windows.
"He saw me and made a move to the front of the house to make it seem like he's passing by," Rule remembered.
That same morning, Rule left her house again to visit a friend. She returned home around noon and found footprints on the back door. Someone had been inside. Rule then searched the house. Someone had taken a .22-caliber handgun, shoes, a video camera, a video-gaming system, marijuana and more than $400 cash.
Three hours later, working from a tip, police arrested Cox, then 17, and a 15-year-old named Corey for the burglary.
When detectives questioned Cox, he tried to pin the crime on his accomplice.
"I didn't break into the house,'' Cox said, pointing a finger at his friend. "Corey ... broke into the house. I did kick in the back door, but it wouldn't open. I kicked on it twice, and Corey said I was making too much noise.''
Cox was found guilty and placed in the custody of the Youth Services Bureau.
Two months later, in December 2006, Cox's mother, Stephanie Williams, purchased a $75,000 home about a mile away and moved the family. But Rule doesn't think that distance kept Cox off Gillie Street.
Five bullets flew through Rule's bedroom window as she slept one night in July 2007. One of the bullets lodged in Rule's leg. Kids around the neighborhood told her Cox bragged about the shooting.
"I know it was him, and when I saw him on TV, I wasn't surprised about what they said he did," Rule said.
Police Director Larry Godwin described Cox as a "brutal killer." If the skinny 18-year-old is indeed responsible for murders throughout Frayser, Cox graduated to killing from outbursts and crimes that began as early as age 11, Juvenile Court records indicate.
Raised by a single mother and with a father whose address was listed in police records as "at large,'' Cox first gained attention of court officials while he was in sixth grade. Cox was two months shy of his 12th birthday when in May 2001 police charged him with flicking on a blue cigarette lighter to ignite a roll of toilet paper in the restroom at Jackson Elementary School.
As with several of the six juvenile arrests that followed, Cox was counseled and released, avoiding serious consequences.
In spring 2002, he was charged with simple assault for allegedly hitting a girl in the face with a stick, opening a two-inch gash on her forehead. Two years later, he was charged with truancy.
But by 2006, at age 16, Cox moved to more serious offenses.
That April, organized crime officers arrested him for selling crack cocaine as part of a drug sting. Juvenile Court took the case under advisement and withheld judgment.
Five months later, in September 2006, Juvenile Court found Cox guilty of using his mother's cell phone to call in a bomb threat to Frayser High, where he later dropped out.
That same month, Cox broke into Rule's house after trying futilely to kick in the back door.
And then Cox moved with his mother to Haywood Street, into a rundown brick house with four car tires stacked in the driveway and a birdhouse and a pit bull in the backyard.
Larry Taylor and his wife, Antonia, live across the street from Cox's house at 1587 Haywood. In the year Cox lived on the street, he terrorized the neighborhood, said the 67-year-old Taylor.
"He was an evil son of a (expletive)," Taylor said, shaking his head. "I can tell you that much."
One evening, someone fired a bullet through Taylor's front window. Others on Haywood had shots fired into their homes as well.
Taylor, like Rule, believes he knows who squeezed off those shots: an alleged cop-killer named Dexter D. Cox.
The trigger-happy Cox fired more rounds Jan. 30, when, at 1:50 p.m., he pointed a SIG Sauer pistol into the air in the backyard of 1515 Dellwood, across the street from Frayser High.
Lakesha Cunningham, 23, didn't hear the shots but arrived home in time to find police detaining Cox and scouring her mother's property. Officers found the firearm and a magazine with six rounds in Cunningham's backyard. They confirmed the gun belonged to Vidulich, who was found shot to death in his home less than a mile away.
Memphis police also interrogated Cunningham's brother, Dondrea, a special-education student. He has not been charged with a crime, and Cunningham maintains her brother was inside the house when Cox sent shots into the air.
She thinks the 18-year-old wanted to frame Dondrea for Vidulich's murder, just as Cox tried to pin the September 2006 burglary on another boy.
"My little brother don't know Dexter," Cunningham said. "I believe he was trying to put it on my brother."
A Frayser woman told a jury this morning of seeing her husband shot to death on their porch by a young gunman who then turned on her and fired again.
ReplyDeleteTestifying in Criminal Court from her wheelchair, 57-year-old Barbara Wooten identified defendant Dexter Cox as the shooter who on Oct. 25, 2007, came to their home at 1812 Pinedale inquiring about a treadmill for sale on their porch.
“He shot my husband (Herbert Wooten) and then he shot me in the stomach through the front door,” said Barbara Wooten, who said the bullet damaged her hip. “Then he shot my husband two more times. I called 911. I had to crawl because my legs were in excruciating pain.”
Her testimony came in the first of three separate murder trials Cox is facing.
The 21-year-old Cox, who lived on Haywood not far from the Wootens, is also charged with killing Memphis police Lt. Ed Vidulich, 51, on Jan. 28, 2008, and Gwendolyn Cherry, 45, on Oct. 9, 2007.
Jurors have not been told of those killings.
State prosecutor Ray Lepone said Cox was arrested in February of 2008 for firing a gun in the air near Frayser High School. The 9mm pistol turned out to have been stolen from the Vidulich home.
He faces life without parole if convicted of first-degree murder, attempted first-degree murder and especially aggravated robbery.
Cox admitted shooting the Wootens, but his attorney, Claiborne Ferguson, told jurors today that he shot Herbert Wooten because the man was reaching for the 9mm Luger he kept in a holster on his belt.
“My client is guilty, but he’s not guilty as charged,” Ferguson said to the jury. “He went too far and too many things happened for it to be self defense, but I would ask you to consider one of the lesser-included offenses.”
The trial is being held before Judge Chris Craft.
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