Updated: 8:45 a.m. ET Jan. 17, 2006
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. - A third suspect was arrested in the beating of a homeless man, one of three similar beatings last week that left one man dead.
William Ammons, 18, was arrested Monday and charged with aggravated battery causing bodily harm or disability. He was being held at the Broward County jail on $5,000 bond and a hearing was set for Tuesday.
Two other teens, Brian Hooks and Thomas Daugherty, face murder charges in the death of Norris Gaynor, 45, and aggravated battery charges in the beating of Jacques Pierre, 58, police Capt. Michael Gregory said.
The teens are also suspects in the beating of Raymond Perez, 49, authorities said. All three attacks happened early Thursday.
The attack on Pierre on the Fort Lauderdale campus of Florida Atlantic University was videotaped by a surveillance camera and the pictures were broadcast widely.
Ammons was accused of taking part in one of the attacks but not the fatal one, The Miami Herald reported.
On Monday, Circuit Judge Steven P. DeLuca ordered Daugherty, 17, held for 21 days under juvenile detention and ordered a psychological examination. Prosecutors have not yet decided whether to charge Daugherty as a juvenile or an adult.
A hearing for Hooks was delayed until Tuesday. Because he is 18, Hooks is charged as an adult. His attorney, Jeremy Kroll, said the charges against his client “do not appropriately reflect Brian’s responsibility,” which, he said, was “far more limited than has been speculated.”
Information on Daugherty’s attorney was not available on Monday.
Surveillance video images of Pierre being beaten with what appeared to be baseball bats led to tips that helped police track down Hooks and Daugherty, who turned themselves in to police Sunday, police said.
It was not immediately known if Ammons turned himself in voluntarily Monday.
Authorities are investigating whether as many as four suspects were involved in the beatings, Gregory said Sunday.
© 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed
Lock these fucks up for life, or just do the same to them.
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. - A third suspect was arrested in the beating of a homeless man, one of three similar beatings last week that left one man dead.
William Ammons, 18, was arrested Monday and charged with aggravated battery causing bodily harm or disability. He was being held at the Broward County jail on $5,000 bond and a hearing was set for Tuesday.
Two other teens, Brian Hooks and Thomas Daugherty, face murder charges in the death of Norris Gaynor, 45, and aggravated battery charges in the beating of Jacques Pierre, 58, police Capt. Michael Gregory said.
The teens are also suspects in the beating of Raymond Perez, 49, authorities said. All three attacks happened early Thursday.
The attack on Pierre on the Fort Lauderdale campus of Florida Atlantic University was videotaped by a surveillance camera and the pictures were broadcast widely.
Ammons was accused of taking part in one of the attacks but not the fatal one, The Miami Herald reported.
On Monday, Circuit Judge Steven P. DeLuca ordered Daugherty, 17, held for 21 days under juvenile detention and ordered a psychological examination. Prosecutors have not yet decided whether to charge Daugherty as a juvenile or an adult.
A hearing for Hooks was delayed until Tuesday. Because he is 18, Hooks is charged as an adult. His attorney, Jeremy Kroll, said the charges against his client “do not appropriately reflect Brian’s responsibility,” which, he said, was “far more limited than has been speculated.”
Information on Daugherty’s attorney was not available on Monday.
Surveillance video images of Pierre being beaten with what appeared to be baseball bats led to tips that helped police track down Hooks and Daugherty, who turned themselves in to police Sunday, police said.
It was not immediately known if Ammons turned himself in voluntarily Monday.
Authorities are investigating whether as many as four suspects were involved in the beatings, Gregory said Sunday.
© 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed
Lock these fucks up for life, or just do the same to them.
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