Murder of Christie Lynn Mullins

Murder of Christie Lynn Mullins | |
---|---|
Location | Columbus, Ohio, U.S. |
Date | August 23, 1975 |
Attack type | Kidnapping, rape, murder |
Weapons | 2x4 wooden plank |
Victim | Christie Lynn Mullins, aged 14 |
Perpetrator | Henry H. Newell Jr |
Motive | unknown |
Accused | Jack Allen Carmen |
the murder of Christie Mullins
[edit]Christie Lynn Mullins was a 14-year-old girl who was abducted, sexually assaulted, and brutally murdered on August 23, 1975, behind the Graceland shopping center in Columbus, Ohio.[1][2][3] It was later determined that the cause of death was blunt force trauma to the head[1]. originally Jack Allen Carmen was charged with the murder, pleading guilty.[2] Following revelations about a witness called Henry H. Newell Jr. Following a new police investigation, Newell, who was deceased a age 63, cause of death lung cancer[3]. After his death, his nice, Pam brown came forward to police claiming her uncle 16 at the time of the murder, Henry Newell confessed to the brutal slaying of 14 year old, Christie.[3] she stated that she stayed quit due to the fear of her and her family's safety, and later said "I just want the Mullins family to know I held it in for many years and I regret that by all means. I would like to see them get closure, more than anything"[3] , Carmen was re-tried and acquitted.[2] Following a new police investigation, Newell, who was deceased, was revealed as the murderer in November 2015.[2][4][5][6][7] Author John Oller, who covered the case in his 2014 book An All-American Murder, was credited with helping solve the case.[8]
statements
[edit]the witness Henry H. Newell jr. claimed that he was was walking with his son and wife behind the mall, when him and his family saw a man beating a young girl with a 2x4 wooden plank, the man saw the family walking and quickly fled the scene.[1] the description of the unidentified man was tall, white, male, late teens, scrawny thin build, long hair, scruffy face, cut of shorts, and shirtless[1]. when the police arrived they found the girl, latter to be identified as Christie, who was seen lying unconscious, with her hands tied in front of her in the wooded area, her face unidentifiable due to the beating on her face and head, her tank top pulled down her waist, and she was barefoot[1][9] another key statement was the reason Newell was shirtless, he said when the man ran off him and his wife said they checked on the girl to see if she was still alive, when the found no pulse he took his shirt of and placed it over her face.[1]
when her classmate carol was questioned by authorities she said that earlier that day her and Christie were swimming at the pool in her housing complex, she got a phone call from a radio DJ saying that there would be a "cheerleading competition" behind the shopping center, Christie agreed to go to the "competition" and when they arrived to the back of the shopping center no one was there, so carol claimed to have gone inside and asked about the "competition", no one had a answer about it, she went back to were Christie was staying. Christie was no longer there when she arrived, so she went home thinking Christie did the same[1].
later when Christie's mother, Maureen Mullins was questioned by authorities, detectives asked about her interests/hobbies, specifically cheerleading or gymnastics, her Mother was confused, because her daughter had little to no interest in that type of hobbies, and when she was asked about her "friend" carol, she was yet again confused because carol did not know Christie well but was only her classmate.[1]
key information on the murder.
[edit]there were many key parts on the murder that were overlooked when the original investigation, such as the similarity of the description of the cloths that the man, and Newell were wearing, such as the fact they were both shirtless and both had cut off shorts and In the initial investigation Newell was shirtless, after being questioned about it he said he covered her face, the shirt was never found.[1] Newell also claimed that when the man ran off he picked up the 2x4 and chucked it 20-25 ft in the direction that the man ran in, it lined up with the physical evidence but multiply people had there duots about the claim[1] another thing was the "radio DJ" phone call, it was never fully looked into let alone seen as a factor of the case.[1]
arrest made.
[edit]the first arrest was made 3 days after the murder, when a patrol officer pulled over a man man named Jack Allen Carmen, he had a due to the striking resablincs to the composite sketch[10]. after hours of questioning he confessed.[2] he was later tried and pleaded guilty in September 3, 1975.[10] in an a reporter interview Jack Allen later confessed to lying about committing the murder and only said he did because the police were being nice to him.[10] he was then reassess and given an IQ test, when the results were back it was determined that Jack had an IQ of 50 and was dreamed mentally disabled and therefore was later retried with the new information.[1][10] he was later released[2].
main suspect
[edit]in the beginning of the case there were not a many suspect other than the man that Newell claimed he saw, but since it was an unidentified it was hard to determine where, who, this mystery man is. minimal tips came in until the arrest 3 days after the murder but even then it was found to be a hoax[2]. until September of 1977, when Newell's house was set on fire, it was later revealed that it was Newell that set the fire in attempts to redeem insurance money for the home.[2] it only came to the concern because he has had a criminal past of 2 similar crimes[2]. unfortunately there was not enough evidence to convict Newell for christie's murder.
after it all
[edit]after 40 year the family finally had a sense of closer, when a tip came forward. Newell, who was deceased a age 63, due to lung cancer[3]. After his death in 2013, his nice, Pam brown came forward to police claiming her uncle 16 at the time of the murder, Henry Newell confessed to the brutal slaying of 14 year old, Christie.[3] she stated that she stayed quit due to the fear of her and her family's safety, and later said that Newell would tell the family about the horrific acts saying he told us "at the time we were just neighbors, when I saw her waiting behind the mall, I tried to make a move on her, she politely declined and thing escalated. at that point I tried her hands, she wouldn't stop screaming so I started to bash her in the head with the wooden plank. "[3], "at that point he went home and told my aunt and my dad to go down and say the found her when on a hike."[3] Pam said."I just want the Mullins family to know I held it in for many years and I regret that by all means. I would like to see them get closure, more than anything"[3]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l MURDERED: Christie Mullins, January 15, 2024, retrieved March 5, 2025
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "Jack Allen Carmen - National Registry of Exonerations Pre 1989". www.law.umich.edu.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Mahato, Nikita (September 8, 2022). "3 chilling details about Christie Mullins murder case". www.sportskeeda.com.
- ^ "Police close 1975 teen murder case". Sunny 95 (sunny95.com). Saga Communications, Inc. November 6, 2015. Retrieved November 29, 2024.
- ^ Zachariah, Holly. "Finding Christie Mullins' murderer-40 years too late". Columbus Monthly.
- ^ Dispatch, Theodore Decker, The Columbus. "Police: Man who claimed to find Christie Mullins was her killer 40 years ago". The Columbus Dispatch.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Sun, Clermont (September 8, 2021). "Marc Hoover: Justice denied: The Christie Mullins murder". The Clermont Sun.
- ^ "Author Of Book About Christie Mullins Murder Helped Police Solve Cold Case". WOSU Public Media. November 8, 2015.
- ^ Dispatch, Theodore Decker, The Columbus. "Police: Man who claimed to find Christie Mullins was her killer 40 years ago". The Columbus Dispatch. Retrieved March 5, 2025.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ a b c d "Jack Allen Carmen - National Registry of Exonerations Pre 1989". www.law.umich.edu. Retrieved March 5, 2025.