Judge apologizes for light sentence in Oakland WF 6th grader's 1974 vaginal damage, murder by nigger

voiceofreason

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http://www.ktvu.com/story/27617193/judge-apologizes-for-light-sentence-in-oakland-6th-graders-murder

Judge apologizes for light sentence in Oakland 6th grader's murder
12/12/14

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OAKLAND (BCN) - A 66-year-old ex-felon was sentenced Friday to 5 years to life for his second-degree murder conviction for killing a 13-year-old girl at her family's home in East Oakland 40 years ago.

Alameda County Superior Court Judge Larry Goodman apologized to family members of Julie McElhiney for the lenient sentence he imposed for Curtis Tucker for killing her on Aug. 9, 1974, but said his hands are tied by

the sentencing laws that were in effect at the time.

"I wish there was more that I could do but there's a reason they changed the law so crimes like this would get punished more severely," Goodman said.

Tucker, who has prior convictions for sexual assault and burglary, pleaded no contest to second-degree murder on July 8, just before a trial was to begin on allegations that he sexually assaulted and murdered McElhiney.

According to Oakland police, McElhiney, a sixth-grader at Sequoia Elementary School, was found at about 5:40 p.m. on Aug. 9, 1974, face down on the second floor of her family's apartment at 3022 Pleitner Ave.

She was then transported to Highland Hospital in Oakland, where she was pronounced dead. An autopsy said her cause of death was blunt force trauma to her head.

The coroner also documented that there was an injury to her vaginal area, according to a probable cause statement by Oakland police Sgt. Michael Weisenberg.

The case remained unsolved until 2012, when Tucker's DNA was found on the clothing that McElhiney was wearing at the time of her death, according to Weisenberg.

McElhiney is survived by her mother and four sisters and three brothers, her family members said.

Jenny McElhiney, one of McElhiney's older sisters, said, "I pray that we never repeat an era like the 1970s when the life of little girls meant so little and murderers walked free after five to seven years."

McElhiney said her sister was a good student and a talented violinist but Tucker "stole her music, her art, her friendships and beautiful mind and spirit" by killing her.

McElhiney said if her sister were able to speak to Tucker, she would ask him, "Why did you hit me hard in the head with a wine bottle, force me into a dressing room, throw me against the wall, wrap an electrical cord

around my neck, force yourself into my body, the body of a child, fill a bathtub with water and throw my naked body into it?"


Kathy McElhiney, another older sister, read a letter signed by all family members saying that Julie McElhiney's death has left them "greatly traumatized" for the past 40 years and caused "immeasurable anxiety and

suffering."

The letter alleged that the Oakland Police Department caused "physical and psychological pain" for one of McElhiney's brothers, who was 16 at the time of her death, by focusing on him as a suspect before finally

focusing on Tucker.

The letter said McElhiney's younger sister, who was only 10 at the time and slept in the same room with McElhiney has experienced "grief and suffering that have never abated" and never married or led a normal life.

The letter said, "We have grave doubts about justice and not protecting children from predators. We waited 38 years for this crime to be solved and what kind of justice is that?"

Goodman, who appeared to be on the verge of tears, told McElhiney's family members, "Sometimes there's nothing I can say. I can't imagine the pain you've gone through."

Tucker looked straight ahead and didn't show any emotion when McElhiney's family spoke in court today and didn't make any comments before he was sentenced.

He will be eligible for parole in several years.

Offender Name: CURTIS TUCKER
Offender ID/CDCR#:
1719408
Date of Birth:
06/24/1948
Age:
66
Race:
African American
Gender:
Male

Custody Status:
In Custody
Location of Offender:
Alameda County Sheriff's Office

Scheduled Release Date:


NOTE: GOOGLE IMAGE SEARCH =Curtis Tucker, seen here at his Manhattan Supreme Court arraignment, sentenced for 2004 rape of a 14-year-old Manhattan girl after DNA match. Another nigger with same name
 
Tucker, who has prior convictions for sexual assault and burglary, pleaded no contest to second-degree murder on July 8, just before a trial was to begin on allegations that he sexually assaulted and murdered McElhiney.
NIGGERS ARE ERECTIONS MOUNTED UPON 2 LEGS AIMED AT POTENTIAL VICTIMS WHILE AIMLESSLY WALKING.


...
Julie had been in bed at her family’s Pleitner Avenue home, and her 10-year-old sister played outside, when Tucker sneaked into the house on Aug. 9, 1974. Julie’s family gave an account in court about what happened next: He hit her in the head with a wine bottle, forced her into a dressing room, and threw her 75-pound body against a wall. He tied an electrical cord around her neck, and forced himself into her body. He filled a bathtub and placed her naked body inside it, which was the state her mother found her dead.
Her 16-year-old brother tried in vain to resuscitate her. Police unjustly focused their investigation on him, adding to the family’s “untold physical and psychological pain,” they said.
...
Tucker’s DNA was in a national database from a 1978 rape arrest in Washington state. Before Julie was killed, he was convicted of a 1972 burglary in downtown Oakland in which he was also accused of attempting to sexually assault a woman. He pleaded no contest to second-degree murder this summer with knowledge that under 1974 laws he would get sentenced to 5 years to life, but he wouldn’t have to serve more than seven years, including the two years he’s already spent in Alameda County Jail since his arrest. Under today’s laws, he would have faced the death penalty or life in prison without the possibility of parole.
 
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