Dakota Valkyrie
July 20th, 2009, 04:32 PM
http://i26.tinypic.com/1zc3eva.jpg
A man once sentenced to death for kidnapping and killing a taxi driver was accused of kidnapping a family in Gaston County on Saturday.
Police say the family of four managed to escape when their alleged kidnapper stopped at a convenience store for gasoline and baby diapers.
Jerry Douglas Case, the 52-year-old suspect, is in the hospital after a shootout with deputies and has not yet been charged.
Police said the family – a father, his daughter and two other children – was kidnapped in Gaston County around 5 p.m. Friday and escaped 12 hours later at a Kangaroo gas station on the outskirts of Gaffney, S.C.
[...]
Early Saturday, with the kidnapper's attention diverted at the gas station, police say, his captives started the car and drove away. They stopped in Blacksburg, S.C. – about 10 miles northeast of Gaffney – and called 911.
Deputies from the Cherokee County Sheriff's Office went to the gas station and chased the suspect as he fled into a swampy area.
Deputies said the suspect turned and fired at them, injuring one deputy. Officers returned fire, striking the suspect several times. Case later was airlifted to Spartanburg Regional Hospital, where he had surgery. The injured officer sustained a minor scratch on the leg during the shooting and was treated at the scene.
The incident was another violent chapter in Case's arrest history.
In 1986, he was sentenced to death for first-degree murder and first-degree kidnapping. He pleaded guilty to holding a knife to a Tennessee taxi driver's head, forcing him to drive across the Blue Ridge mountains to North Carolina, then robbing and killing him.
He was granted a retrial in 1992 after his attorney argued that an N.C. court had unlawfully sentenced him for a kidnapping that happened in Tennesse.
He pleaded guilty to second-degree murder. Sixteen years later, he was back on the streets.
Case was paroled in June 2008 but got in trouble with the law again by October, when he was charged with driving while impaired. He is awaiting trial on that charge.
[...]http://www.charlotteobserver.com/local/story/841251.html
Jerry Douglas Case, 51, remained in serious condition at Spartanburg Regional Medical Center under heavy guard and investigators don’t expect him to be released until Friday at the earliest.
[...]
Case approached William Payne and his granddaughter, who were fishing at a popular fishing hole about 5 p.m. and ordered both victims back into a wooded area near the fishing access.
Case took Payne's money and credit card, and then forced him at gunpoint to call his adult daughter, Natasha, to pick them up, investigators said.
When Natasha arrived with a small child in the car, Case forced her to drive him and the others to Cherokee County.
Investigators said they stopped at a Kangaroo Station on Highway 18 off Interstate 85.
The victims reported they were able to escape after Case left the keys in the car and went inside to complain about the gas pump not turning on.
Natasha jumped into the driver's seat and drove away, leaving Case behind.
Deputies said the victims called for help and the Cherokee County Sheriff’s Office responded.
Investigators said Monday that Case fired several times at deputies with a gas-powered pellet gun.
One of the pellets hit a deputy in the leg. Deputies said Case was wounded when they fired back.
That deputy was back on the job Monday, investigators said.
[...]http://www.wyff4.com/news/20117841/detail.html
I bet that family is thanking their lucky stars!
A man once sentenced to death for kidnapping and killing a taxi driver was accused of kidnapping a family in Gaston County on Saturday.
Police say the family of four managed to escape when their alleged kidnapper stopped at a convenience store for gasoline and baby diapers.
Jerry Douglas Case, the 52-year-old suspect, is in the hospital after a shootout with deputies and has not yet been charged.
Police said the family – a father, his daughter and two other children – was kidnapped in Gaston County around 5 p.m. Friday and escaped 12 hours later at a Kangaroo gas station on the outskirts of Gaffney, S.C.
[...]
Early Saturday, with the kidnapper's attention diverted at the gas station, police say, his captives started the car and drove away. They stopped in Blacksburg, S.C. – about 10 miles northeast of Gaffney – and called 911.
Deputies from the Cherokee County Sheriff's Office went to the gas station and chased the suspect as he fled into a swampy area.
Deputies said the suspect turned and fired at them, injuring one deputy. Officers returned fire, striking the suspect several times. Case later was airlifted to Spartanburg Regional Hospital, where he had surgery. The injured officer sustained a minor scratch on the leg during the shooting and was treated at the scene.
The incident was another violent chapter in Case's arrest history.
In 1986, he was sentenced to death for first-degree murder and first-degree kidnapping. He pleaded guilty to holding a knife to a Tennessee taxi driver's head, forcing him to drive across the Blue Ridge mountains to North Carolina, then robbing and killing him.
He was granted a retrial in 1992 after his attorney argued that an N.C. court had unlawfully sentenced him for a kidnapping that happened in Tennesse.
He pleaded guilty to second-degree murder. Sixteen years later, he was back on the streets.
Case was paroled in June 2008 but got in trouble with the law again by October, when he was charged with driving while impaired. He is awaiting trial on that charge.
[...]http://www.charlotteobserver.com/local/story/841251.html
Jerry Douglas Case, 51, remained in serious condition at Spartanburg Regional Medical Center under heavy guard and investigators don’t expect him to be released until Friday at the earliest.
[...]
Case approached William Payne and his granddaughter, who were fishing at a popular fishing hole about 5 p.m. and ordered both victims back into a wooded area near the fishing access.
Case took Payne's money and credit card, and then forced him at gunpoint to call his adult daughter, Natasha, to pick them up, investigators said.
When Natasha arrived with a small child in the car, Case forced her to drive him and the others to Cherokee County.
Investigators said they stopped at a Kangaroo Station on Highway 18 off Interstate 85.
The victims reported they were able to escape after Case left the keys in the car and went inside to complain about the gas pump not turning on.
Natasha jumped into the driver's seat and drove away, leaving Case behind.
Deputies said the victims called for help and the Cherokee County Sheriff’s Office responded.
Investigators said Monday that Case fired several times at deputies with a gas-powered pellet gun.
One of the pellets hit a deputy in the leg. Deputies said Case was wounded when they fired back.
That deputy was back on the job Monday, investigators said.
[...]http://www.wyff4.com/news/20117841/detail.html
I bet that family is thanking their lucky stars!