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  • Crazed whiggress bitch kills her no-longer me-so-horney likker

    Granby woman’s murder trial opens in Pineville

    BY JEFF LEHR, jlehr@joplinglobe.com
    Wednesday, May 18, 2016



    http://www.joplinglobe.com/news/loca...ac8349818.html
    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...4589#post14589
    http://christian-identity.net/forum/...4589#post14589


    PINEVILLE, Mo. — Prosecutor Jake Skouby told a jury Tuesday that John Jordon and his family became increasingly wary of Connie Sanders-Ford in the three weeks leading up to the fatal shooting of Jordon a year ago in Granby.

    Sanders-Ford had been a customer of Jordon’s tree-trimming service both before and after her husband died. In the wake of her husband’s death,

    Page 6A

    they’d had an extramarital affair that lasted about a year until Jordon decided to put an end to it in March of last year, the prosecutor said during opening statements on the first day of Sanders-Ford’s murder trial in Pineville.

    The defendant did not take that well, barging into Jordon’s home in Granby on a Friday and confronting his wife, Patricia, the prosecutor said. “The defendant called Patricia ‘pathetic’ for holding on to John,” Skouby told the jury.

    Two days later, on a Sunday, the prosecutor said, she returned to the couple’s house and began arguing with John, loud enough for his wife to hear when she asked if he had told her about the oral sex that they had been having together.

    Skouby told jurors that Jordon’s wife moved out of their home briefly but soon moved back in out of a growing concern for the safety of herself, her daughter and granddaughter because of Sanders-Ford’s behavior. She took out a protection order on Sanders- Ford on March 10 of last year, he said.

    John began “dissociating” himself from Sanders- Ford a few days later. On March 19, he deeded back to her some property that she’d given him.

    He and an adult son also filed for protection orders against her on that date, Skouby told jurors.

    Skouby said the defendant had shown up at the Jordons’ home wanting her guns back. Police were called, and John Jordon handed over the guns, including a Taurus .40-caliber weapon believed to be the weapon that killed him March 30, 2015.

    The family members became particularly alarmed when she called their house and told them she was calling from a cemetery, according to the prosecutor. He said they heard a gunshot in the background and called the sheriff’s office. An investigator went to the cemetery to speak with her. The prosecutor said the investigator learned that she had been lying down on some plots the Jordons owned there.

    According to the prosecutor, Jordon was shot once in the chest just inside a door of his home on Spruce Street in Granby. The shot “nicked the bottom of his heart” and “destroyed his liver,” he said.

    Sanders-Ford, 66, is charged with first-degree murder and armed criminal action, and the trial is expected to last two or three days. The Newton County case was moved to McDonald County on a change of venue.

    Defense attorney Duane Cooper made a brief opening statement in which he denied the culpability of the defendant.

    Cooper said it was true that Sanders-Ford had an affair with Jordon and that she invested in his business and bought property for him. He said the prosecutor’s claim that she showed up at the home of friends in Neosho and told them that she had shot him also is true, although the defendant was “faking it” at the time, he said. He did not explain what he meant by that.

    “There’s going to be evidence from police officers that she was completely incoherent on the way to jail,” Cooper said.

    He said gunshot residue tests suggest that someone other than his client shot Jordon.

    Detective Wanda Williams of the Newton County Sheriff’s Department was called by the prosecution to testify about the scene of the shooting. She told the court that a .40-caliber shell casing was found near the victim’s body and that a Taurus .40-caliber handgun later was found in Sanders- Ford’s purse when a search warrant was executed on her vehicle. The purse was located in the trunk, she said.

    Mary and Morris Jarrett, the friends of the defendant she went to see the day of the killing, also were called as state witnesses.

    Mary Jarrett said she knew something was wrong when Sanders-Ford came in through her back door in a hurry.

    “She just said, ‘I shot him. I shot him,’” Mary Jarrett testified. “I said, ‘Sit down. Shut up. I don’t want to hear no more.’” She told the court that while Sanders-Ford never told her who she shot, she assumed she meant John Jordon.

    Mary Jarrett said Sanders- Ford told her she was trying to call attorney Greg Bridges, and that she took her phone from Sanders- Ford and made the call for her.

    She said she then stepped outside because she did not wish to hear anything more about what her friend had done.

    Morris Jarrett said he was in a back room when Sanders-Ford first entered their house. He heard his wife call for him and came out to the kitchen. Sanders- Ford was there and told him that she shot “him.”

    “I asked her: ‘Shot who?’” he told the court. “She said John Jordon. I asked her how bad she shot him, and she said she really didn’t know.”

    He said Sanders-Ford suggested that they drive over and check him to see, and he told her that he did not think that was a good idea. He called 911 instead, he said.

    Morris Jarrett said she kept saying after that: “I couldn’t have shot somebody. I couldn’t have shot somebody. I couldn’t have.”



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  • #2
    Family testifies about defendant's threats before shooting

    Family testifies about defendant's threats before shooting

    By Jeff Lehr jlehr@joplinglobe.com
    May 18, 2016


    https://www.joplinglobe.com/news/loc...bb0ea202c.html
    http://christian-identity.net/forum/...4594#post14594
    http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...4594#post14594


    PINEVILLE, Mo. — Patricia Jordon testified Wednesday that she first learned husband John was having an affair with Connie Sanders-Ford in late February 2015 when Sanders-Ford burst into their home in Granby and asked Patricia if she knew who she was.

    Sanders-Ford informed Jordon in front of her husband that she'd been having an affair with him for over a year.

    "I'm here to tell you so he can leave you," Sanders-Ford explained, according to Patricia Jordon's testimony on the second day of Sanders-Ford's trial in Pineville on first-degree murder charges in the fatal shooting of John Jordon.

    Patricia Jordon, son Jamey Jordon and daughter Michelle Moore were called as witnesses for the prosecution as to Sanders-Ford's behavior in the weeks leading up to the March 30, 2015, slaying of the 58-year-old victim.

    Patricia Jordon said Sanders-Ford, 66, referred to her as "pathetic" the day she informed her of the affair.

    "I kept telling her to leave," she testified. "John kept telling her to leave. But she wouldn't."

    She said Sanders-Ford returned to the couple's home two days later and argued loudly with John. Patricia said she stayed in a back bedroom but could hear what was said. She said Sanders-Ford threatened to "destroy" the couple and let everybody in town know about the affair she'd been having with John.

    Learning of his dalliance caused Patricia Jordon to move out of the couple's home and in with a daughter for a couple days. But she moved back in out of fear for the safety of her daughter and granddaughter when Sanders-Ford began following her around, she testified. The defendant's behavior eventually forced her to seek a restraining order on March 10 of last year.

    Jordon said that, in the meantime, her husband kept coming by to apologize for cheating on her and wanting to get back together. She said she remained open to the idea since they had been married for 40 years and she did not wish to just throw that away. She admitted that she'd weathered her husband's other affairs before the one with Sanders-Ford.

    "I just told him if (he) and I were going to get back together, then he'd have to cut all ties with her," she said.

    The son and daughter testified that their father began to do that, closing out a checking account that he and Sanders-Ford had opened together. The daughter said he sent her a money order for the amount of the balance. She said he also was looking to get his name removed from the deed to some property they'd bought with Sanders-Ford's money.

    Jamey Jordon, 37, said he learned from Sanders-Ford in February of last year that he was named as beneficiary on that deed. He said he told her he did not want to be the designated beneficiary.

    "She was mainly trying to get me to convince my dad to leave my mom," he testified.

    He said she made the menacing comment at the time that if she shot herself and his father, he'd get the property.

    Patricia Jordon testified that in the days before she sought the protection order, Sanders-Ford kept calling their house. She answered the phone on one of the occasions. Sanders-Ford wanted to know if she and John were getting back together, and she told her that they were, even though that had not been settled between them as yet, she said.

    Patricia Jordon said that made Sanders-Ford mad and that she demanded John return some guns of hers. The Jordons called Granby police about the matter, and the guns were returned to her through the police March 10, the day Patricia Jordon sought and obtained the protection order.

    Jamey Jordon said that he and his father met Sanders-Ford near the square in Neosho nine days later to return an investment of $30,000 that she'd made in their tree-trimming service. His father brought a check with him to pay her back, he said. When she followed them to the son's house, John Jordon informed her that both he and his son had applied that day for protection orders against her.

    "She said that if we didn't drop (them), she would shoot us both," Jamey Jordon said.

    A pathologist testified that the victim was shot in the left side of his chest with a single .40-caliber round that grazed his heart and cut through his liver and a lung before coming to rest on the right side of his back. Other state witnesses testified that one of the guns returned to the defendant by police was a Taurus .40-caliber handgun, which was later located in her purse in the trunk of her car, and that she told two friends the day of the shooting that she'd shot somebody and named John Jordon as the victim to one of them.

    Defense attorney Duane Cooper claimed in opening statements that his client was "faking it" when she told her friends that she'd shot someone. But he called no witnesses to offer testimony supporting that claim.

    The defense instead focused on cross-examination of a Missouri State Highway Patrol criminalist called by the state to testify concerning gunshot residue tests performed in the investigation of the case.

    Criminalist Karlena Kaempfe said tests performed on the defendant's hands found no gunshot residue. She explained that this could be due to a number of explanations, including the possibility that her hands had been wiped or washed off. Kaempfe said that normally a person present when a gun is fired will have gunshot residue on them. She said John Jordon's hands tested positive for such residue.

    The gunshot residue test results raised the question of whether John Jordon had shot himself, but the defense presented no other supporting evidence or testimony for that scenario. Dr. Keith Norton, the pathologist, testified that most suicides involve contact wounds. John Jordon was shot from a distance of less than 41 inches, but his was not a contact wound, Norton said.

    Cooper also elicited testimony from Jamey Jordon that he later found the box for the suspected murder weapon in his father's truck and turned it in to police. But there was no follow-up line of questioning to suggest how that fact might affect the case.

    The defense rested late Wednesday afternoon without calling the defendant to testify. When asked by Circuit Judge Tim Perigo outside the presence of the jury, Sanders-Ford confirmed that she did not wish to take the witness stand in her own defense.

    Closing arguments

    The trial of Connie Sanders-Ford will resume at 9 a.m. Thursday with closing arguments and the reading of jury instructions.

    .

    ===666===666===666===

    The Neosho Daily Douche

    All the ZOGling-Approved Shit That Sorta Fits We Print
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    • #3
      Jury convicts Granby woman of murder -- Defendant now faces mandatory life term

      Jury convicts Granby woman of murder

      Defendant now faces mandatory life term

      BY JEFF LEHR, jlehr@joplinglobe.com
      20 May 2016



      http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...4596#post14596
      http://christian-identity.net/forum/...4596#post14596


      PINEVILLE, Mo. — A jury deliberated 58 minutes Thursday before finding Connie Sanders-Ford guilty of first-degree murder and armed criminal action in the yearago fatal shooting of John Jordon in Granby.

      A jury of eight women and four men decided the 66-year-old defendant acted with premeditation in the murder of the 58-year-old Jordon, with whom she had been having an affair for over a year when he decided to end the relationship to save his marriage.

      SEE TRIAL, 8A FROM 1A


      The first-degree murder conviction rendered at the conclusion of Sanders- Ford’s three-day trial in Pineville, where the case was moved on a change of venue from Newton County, consigns her to a mandatory sentence of life in prison without parole under state law, with Circuit Judge Tim Perigo setting formal sentencing of the defendant for July 5.

      “You’re dealing with a woman who, frankly, was scorned,” Prosecutor Jake Skouby told jurors during closing arguments.

      He suggested that they might empathize with her as a woman who had lost her own husband and wanted desperately to see her affair with Jordon hold up. Her actions in that regard in the weeks preceding the murder had a pathetic quality to them, the prosecutor said.

      Jordon’s wife, Patricia, son Jamey and daughter Michelle testified at the trial regarding his desire to end the affair and save his marriage, and regarding Sanders-Ford’s increasingly alarming behavior as she refused to accept that their relationship was over.

      Patricia Jordon testified how Sanders-Ford burst into her home and informed her of the affair in an effort to get them to split up and how Sanders-Ford then began following her around and calling their house. She finally was forced to obtain a protection order March 10, 2015.

      Her husband and their son Jamey also applied for protection orders nine days later because of a comment she’d made to the son about shooting his father and herself.

      The protection order was issued for Patricia Jordon and served the day after she applied. The orders for John Jordon and his son had yet to be served when he was shot and killed in his home March 30, 2015.

      Because there were no witnesses to the shooting, the prosecution relied heavily on incriminating statements the defendant made the day of the murder to a Neosho couple she knew. Mary and Morris Jarrett testified that she came to their house the day of the murder and told them she’d shot “him.” When Morris Jarrett asked her whom she shot, she told him John Jordon, he testified.

      Defense attorney Duane Cooper told jurors during opening statements that she was “faking it” when she made those statements to the Jarretts. But he called no witnesses and presented no evidence to support that claim, and Sanders-Ford chose not to testify on her own behalf.

      Cooper tried to make the results of gunshot residue testing raise doubt in jurors’ minds about how Jordon was shot. The tests found no gunshot residue on Sanders-Ford’s hands, while there was residue on the victim’s hands. “You heard the Jarretts testify,” Cooper told the jury. “I asked them both if she went to the bathroom. (They said) she didn’t. If she didn’t shoot a gun, she didn’t kill John Jordon.”

      Calling their attention to a minor mark the autopsy had noted on a knuckle of the victim’s right hand, he suggested that Sanders-Ford may have confronted Jordon at his home with the gun and the victim tried to take it away from her, causing it to discharge. He then physically demonstrated how that might have happened and how it accounted for what little physical evidence was obtained at the crime scene, including the gunshot residue test results, the location of the shell casing on the floor with respect to the body and proximity of the gun to the victim’s body when it fired.

      “He took that gun away from her,” Cooper argued.

      Skouby said there was no evidence to support such a conclusion, while there was testimony, the defendant’s own statements, to support the prosecution’s contentions. He questioned why, if he had accidentally shot himself, she did not call 911.

      Instead, she went to the Jarretts and told them she shot him, he said.



      All the shit unfit to print

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      • #4
        Woman gets life term in Granby murder

        Woman gets life term in Granby murder

        By Jeff Lehr jlehr@joplinglobe.com
        Jul 5, 2016



        https://www.joplinglobe.com/news/loc...6913b24e5.html
        http://christian-identity.net/forum/...4892#post14892
        http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...4892#post14892


        PINEVILLE, Mo. — Circuit Judge Tim Perigo on Tuesday assessed Connie Sanders-Ford the sentence of life without parole that her first-degree murder conviction in the slaying of John Jordon requires under state law.

        The judge sentenced Sanders-Ford to concurrent terms of life without parole for the murder conviction and three years for armed criminal action at a hearing in Pineville, where the case was moved on a change of venue from Newton County.

        A jury of eight women and four men found the 66-year-old defendant guilty of both charges after a three-day trial in May.

        Jordon, 58, was fatally shot the afternoon of March 30, 2015, just inside the door of his home in Granby. Sanders-Ford, a widow, had been having an affair with Jordon for over a year when he decided to end their relationship. The victim’s wife, Patricia, son Jamey and daughter Michelle testified at the trial regarding the victim’s desire to end the affair and save his marriage and how Sanders-Ford’s behavior became increasingly alarming as she refused to accept that decision.

        According to Patricia Jordon, the defendant burst into her home and informed her of the affair in an effort to destroy their marriage more than a month before the murder. She said Sanders-Ford then began following her around and calling the Jordons’ house until she finally was forced to obtain a protection order 20 days before the murder.

        John Jordon and his son applied for protection orders nine days after Patricia Jordon because of a comment Sanders-Ford made to the son about shooting his father and herself. The protection orders for the father and son had yet to be issued when John Jordon was shot and killed.

        With no witnesses to the shooting, Prosecutor Jake Skouby was forced to rely heavily at trial on incriminating statements the defendant made the day of the murder to a Neosho couple she knew. Mary and Morris Jarrett testified that she came to their house and told them that she’d shot “him.” When Morris Jarrett asked her whom she shot, she told him John Jordon.

        Defense attorney Duane Cooper claimed his client was “faking it” when she made those statements to the Jarretts, but he called no witnesses to support his claim or explain why she would wish to do that.

        Cooper also tried to use the results of gunshot-residue tests to raise doubts in jurors’ minds about how Jordon was shot. No gunshot residue was found on the defendant’s hands, while there was residue on the victim’s hands. He further suggested to the jury a scenario in which Jordon might have accidentally caused the weapon to fire while he was trying to wrest it away from Sanders-Ford.

        Motion denied

        Before sentencing Connie Sanders-Ford to life in prison Tuesday, Circuit Judge Tim Perigo denied a motion for a new trial filed by her attorney. She still has the right to appeal her conviction to a higher state court.

        .

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        • #5
          Panel rejects appeal of "Fatal Attraction" killer who murdered Granby man

          Panel rejects appeal of "Fatal Attraction" killer who murdered Granby man


          https://rturner229.blogspot.com/2020...-of-fatal.html
          http://christian-identity.net/forum/...1179#post21179
          http://whitenationalist.org/forum/sh...1179#post21179

          The Missouri Southern District Court of Appeals today rejected the efforts of the "Fatal Attraction" killer of a Granby man to receive a new trial.

          A McDonald County jury convicted Connie Sanders-Ford, 70, of first degree murder after she rejected a plea bargain offer from the Newton County Prosecuting Attorney's office, which would have sentenced her to 25 years in exchange for a plea to second degree murder, and rolled the dice at trial.

          That decision did not work out well for the Fairview woman, who was convicted and then sentenced July 5, 2016 to life without the possibility of parole for the March 30, 2015 murder of John Jordan, 58, Granby.

          In her appeal, Sanders-Ford said her lawyer, Duane Cooper, had told her that she would have to serve 85 percent of the 25 years, when she actually might have served as little as 40 percent of her sentenced because of a state law exception for older offenders.







          As it turned out neither Cooper, nor the prosecutor was aware of that exception, but as the appellate decision noted, the trial judge, Tim Perigo, would certainly have let them know and it was likely the Newton County Prosecuting Attorney would have required the 85 percent as part of any plea arrangement.

          Sanders-Ford's crime was described in an earlier appeal, which the Southern District Court of Appeals rejected September 25, 2017. In that appeal, Sanders-Ford argued that she should have been charged with second degree murder because hers was a crime of passion and that the prosecution had not proven that she deliberated before she shot and killed Jordan.

          The appellate court disagreed.

          Victim’s wife was fixing supper at home when Defendant walked in, introduced herself, said she and Victim had “been having an affair for over a year” and “I’m here to tell you so that he can leave you,” called Victim’s wife “pathetic,” then spent the next month trying to break up the marriage:

          • Defendant repeatedly returned to Victim’s home to make trouble. Once the police had to be called to get her to leave.

          • Defendant stalked Victim’s wife at her job, her home, and on the streets. Victim’s wife drove to the sheriff’s office on one occasion and Defendant followed her inside.

          • Defendant offered Victim’s adult son a financial incentive to convince Victim to abandon the marriage. When the son refused and told Defendant to leave them alone, Defendant threatened to shoot Victim and herself.

          • Defendant went to the son’s house, argued with Victim, and pulled a gun, which Victim took away from her.

          • Defendant threatened to “destroy” Victim’s family by telling the whole town about the affair, then went to the local newspaper and angrily demanded that a story be written about Victim.

          • While Victim’s wife was at the courthouse seeking an order of protection, Defendant approached and handed her a purported “love contract” between Defendant and Victim.

          • Defendant called Victim and threatened to shoot herself because he would not leave his wife. Victim then heard a gunshot, hung up, and called 911. Police found Defendant at the cemetery, lying near grave plots owned by Victim and his wife. Meanwhile, Victim sought to sever financial ties with Defendant, then he, his wife, and his son all obtained ex parte orders of protection against her. Later that day, Defendant confronted Victim at his son’s house and threatened to shoot Victim and his son unless the orders of protection were dropped.

          Two days before the hearing date on full orders of protection against Defendant, she shot Victim in the chest at the front door to his home. As he succumbed, Defendant fled to a friend’s house, confessed what she had done, and sought to call an attorney.


          Posted by Randy at 6:26 PM 8 April 2020

          .


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