RAYMORE, Mo. — For just the second time since the turn of the century, Raymore Police are investigating a homicide.
It happened early Saturday morning and a suspect has already been arrested and is behind bars.
Danielle Beckett,30, died at the hospital Saturday, less than an hour after police say her husband Erick Beckett shot her.
Despite this being their first holicide case in six years, detectives quickly made an arrest.
“We got a 911 call here today that a woman had been shot,” Raymore Police Captain Jim Wilson told FOX 4 News.
The woman was later identified as Beckett, who lived on South Sunrise.
“Once the victim was taken to the hospital, two other individuals
were taken to Raymore Police Department for interviews,” Wilson said.
One of the people investigators interviewed was Beckett’s husband
Erick. While he was at police headquaarters, detectives waited on a
search warrant. Once it was in hand, they got to work.
“They were just investigating the scene and gathering a little bit of evidence,” Wilson told FOX 4 News.
Whatever evidence detectives found — combined with Beckett’s interview led to a first degree murder charge against Beckett.
Wilson says cases like this one just don’t happen very often in Raymore.
“It’s been several years, several years,” he said.
More than six years to be exact. In late January 2007, 31-year-old
Sheldon Haynes had just returned home from a night of bowling, when he
was shot and killed in his driveway.
Before Haynes was killed, it had been almost seven years since a murder had been committed in Raymore.
“It’s a pretty quiet neighborhood and we take pride in neighborhood and the patrolling the officers do too,” Wilson said.
Beckett is being held in the Cass County Jail. He will be formally
charged on Monday and is also expected to make his first court
appearance.
A compilation of daily news articles from around the United States about deaths (including both people and animals) that appear to occur in the context of a past or present intimate relationship, focusing on 2009-present. (NOTE: this blog is limited to incidents that appear in the media and are captured by our search terms. We recognize this is not an exhaustive portrayal of all deaths resulting from intimate violence.) When is society going to realize intimate violence makes victims of us all?
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