• Photo
Deputies respond to a call at the home just over the state line in Fayetteville, Tenn.

Deputies respond to a call at the home just over the state line in Fayetteville, Tenn., Monday, Oct. 22, 2012. (AP Photo/The Huntsville Times, Sarah Cole)

  • More Featured Content
Simply Healthy: Apple White Grape Punch
Simply Healthy: Apple White Grape Punch

Pep up your morning with this vitamin-enriched drink! Fresh …

Obama's approval ratings take big hit
Obama's approval ratings take big hit

According to a recent poll, the number of Americans who think …

Curious koala gets comfy inside home
Curious koala gets comfy inside home

A curious koala in South Australia managed to walk into a house…

10 Father's Day gifts to avoid
10 Father's Day gifts to avoid

Resist the urge to grab up these not-so-great presents for Dad.

Fashion preview: 2013 Miss USA
Fashion preview: 2013 Miss USA

See a selection of the glamorous gowns contestants will wear in…

Advertisement
  • Report It!

When you see it happening - Report It!

When you know it's going on, when you see it happening  - Report It!

Links sought for deaths of 6 in Tennessee, Alabama

A puzzling case for authorities

Updated: Wednesday, 24 Oct 2012, 5:05 AM MDT
Published : Wednesday, 24 Oct 2012, 5:05 AM MDT

FAYETTEVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Three women and an 18-month-old boy are slain in Tennessee, but an infant and toddler are spared. A man wanted for questioning in the homicides is found dead in the Alabama woods, while one of his presumed acquaintances is found shot to death.

The discovery of six bodies in two states Monday and Tuesday presents a puzzling case for authorities as they began searching for clues to confirm that the deaths were somehow linked.

The mystery began Monday. That's when a 3-year-old boy called relatives from a house outside Fayetteville saying he couldn't wake up anyone in the home, the boy's godmother, Constance Winston, told Huntsville, Alabama, television station WAFF.

Family members arriving at the house, about 100 miles south of Nashville, Tenn., found all the doors and windows locked, but were able to coach the child into opening a garage door. When they reached inside to pull him out, they saw blood and called police.

When authorities got there, they found the lifeless bodies of 22-year-old Chabreya Campbell, and her 18-month-old son, Rico Ragland. The body of 21-year-old Amber McCaulley of Huntsville, Ala., was also inside the home.

Hours later, the body of 21-year-old Jessica Brown was found in her home in Fayetteville. Her 2-month-old child was found unharmed.

"I cannot imagine. I cannot imagine. ... There's no reason for anyone to have done something like this," Winston said.

The 3-year-old's father, Warren Vincent Crutcher, was found dead in the Alabama woods, just across the Tennessee state line, police said. They did not reveal the cause of death for him, the women or the dead child. Madison County, Alabama, Coroner Craig Whisenant did say that it appeared Crutcher's death wasn't a suicide.

Jeffrey Pope, who was identified by local news media as an acquaintance of Crutcher, was fatally shot in Huntsville, police said. Authorities did not confirm the connection between the two men, but they are investigating whether Pope's death could be linked to the other five, Whisenant said. His body was found in the woods by utility crews, WAFF reported.

The Tennessee Department of Children's Services had no prior involvement with Campbell, Crutcher or the children, spokeswoman Molly Sudderth said Tuesday. She said the slayings would lead DCS to open a case and, if needed, take the 3-year-old into state custody until permanent arrangements could be made for him.

___

Associated Press writer Bob Johnson contributed to this story from Montgomery, Ala.

  • Comments
Comment With KRQE.com's commenting system, you don't need to register. You can login with an existing Facebook, Yahoo!, Google, or Twitter account and more. 
 

powered by Disqus

Report It to KRQE News 13

Advertisement
  • Top 5 Trending on KRQE.com
    No Stories Available
Advertisement

Advertisement

Explore Featured Content »