MORGAN, HELEN: I Called Him Morgan 2016 -
I was destroyed. And I was curious about what happened to Helen. And then I heard that the police had arrested her and taken her to jail. And I never saw her again. I Called Him Morgan, musician, 2016
It was fun to watch him almost challenge Dizzie in the band musically. ibid.
Lee was going to be a star. ibid. drummer
He had a nice laugh too. ibid. bassist
He was such a rare talent. ibid. musician
He had sold his shoes to get some drugs. ibid.
It was Lee Morgan: he looked like a homeless person. ibid.
My heart went out to him. ibid. Helen
I feel like something bad is going to happen … I can’t live like this. ibid.
The doors flung open and there was Helen … ‘Paul, could you go and talk to your friend Lee because he’s got his little girlfriend here and I feel very uncomfortable with her being here … Lee turns around and bam!’ ibid.
Lee Morgan Killed in N.Y. Club; Was 33: Trumpeter Lee Morgan, 33, was shot and killed at Slugs, the New York nightclub where his quintet was performing … ibid. newspaper report
MORGAN, KIMBERLY: The Face of Evil TV -
A crime wave explodes in a small Michigan town: arson, a shooting in broad daylight and murder. All evidence points to an unlikely suspect. But when the case falls apart detectives are in a race against time because if this one gets away, no-one is safe. The Face of Evil s1e2, ID 2019
Summer 2003: a monster is on the loose. ibid.
Investigators are more convinced than ever that Kimberly Morgan killed Dorothy Murphy. ibid.
MORGAN, MARSHALL murder: see HOOD, TYRONE
MORGAN, PETER: A Killer’s Mistake TV -
Peter Morgan is captured on security cameras that he himself had placed on one of his properties. He’s moving a large package. That same day a young mother had uncharacteristically failed to turn up at the school gate to collect her child. A Killer’s Mistake s3e4: Peter Morgan, DiscoveryPlus 2023
Peter Morgan: a man with whom Georgina had an unusually relationship … A story of mistrust, delusion and murder. ibid.
He wanted Georgina all to himself. ibid.
He discovered Georgina did have plans to leave him. ibid.
MORGAN, STUART: Murdered at Fight Sight TV -
Fears grow for lost girl hitchhiker: A huge search was underway last night for a French girl who has vanished on a visit to Britain. Murdered at Fight Sight s1e9: The Hitchhiker: Celine Figard, newspaper article David Dillon, History 2022
She’d been bludgeoned with a heavy implement and she’d been strangled. ibid. rozzer
Around five different people actually contacted the police to say that there were links with or possible connections with somebody that they knew, a lorry-driver called Stuart Morgan. ibid.
MORLEY, ROGER murder: Forensics: Catching the Killer TV -
A street gang on the rampage in the heart of the capital. Extreme violence that was part of a disturbing trend in the country. A senseless attack that would take the life of a terrorist-bomb survivor. Forensics: Catching the Killer s3e4: The Happy Slapping Killing, Sky Crime 2024
The injuries were so severe that he died that evening. ibid.
Forensic officers had the difficult task of securing potential evidence across multiple locations … Five separate crime scenes spread across half a mile and open to the weather. ibid.
MORO, ALDO murder: viz Assassinations: MORO, ALDO
MORPHEW, BARRY: True Crime Recaps 2023 -
The remains of a missing mother of two were found in a desolate makeshift graveyard … a body police have been looked for for 3 years. True Crime Recaps: Unraveling the Mystery of Suzanne Morphew’s Tragic Fate, Youtube 7.28, 2023
Other people who disappeared or turned up dead in the boneyard … the skeletal remains of James Montoya … Kristal Reisinger … ibid.
Investigators always maintained the scene was staged. They believe Suzanne’s husband Barry was behind her disappearance. ibid.
MORRIS, RAYMOND LESLIE: Fred Dinenage: Murder Casebook TV - Express and Star online -
It was 9:50 p.m. on December 1st 1964 when the nine-year-old girl was discovered lying in a ditch. She’d been raped, strangled, and left for dead. Thankfully, she was still alive but only just. Fred Dinenage: Murder Casebook s2e6: The Cannock Chase Murders, CI 2012
Another young girl had been abducted; but this time Margaret [Reynolds] had simply vanished into thin air. ibid.
Another young girl went out for a walk – five-year-old Dianne Tift left her grandmother’s house. ibid.
Christine Darby had vanished. ibid.
Cannock Chase child killer Raymond Morris lives a ‘quiet and simple’ life in prison, with other inmates unaware of his notoriety, his solicitor said today.
The years have ‘taken their toll’ on the 81-year-old, who is fighting to clear his name over the murder of seven-year-old Walsall girl Christine Darby in 1967, it is claimed.
Morris, a former engineer from Green Lane, Walsall, is behind bars at HMP Wymott in Preston. He was has been locked up for the past 42 years for the murder and is also the prime suspect in the killings of schoolgirls Margaret Reynolds of Aston and Diane Tift from Bloxwich. Express and Star online article 4th November 2010
MORTON, MICHAEL: Texas Tribune online -
Thirty years ago, a Williamson County murder set in motion a shoddy prosecution – one in which ignored witness accounts and withheld evidence led to the conviction of an innocent man.
Michael Morton spent 25 years in prison for his wife’s bludgeoning death before DNA analysis finally freed him, a miscarriage in justice that still reverberates through the state’s criminal cases.
Christine Morton was beaten to death in their family home on August 13, 1986. Michael Morton should never have been a key suspect: he had left for work early that morning. The couple’s three-year-old son Eric, who witnessed the murder, described a man who looked nothing like his father. Neighbors had reported a man lurking in the neighborhood. A canceled check made out to Christine Morton was cashed with a forged signature after her death, and her credit card was used fraudulently in San Antonio.
But police pointed to Michael Morton anyway, and Williamson County District Attorney Ken Anderson was adamant he had his guy – a jilted man he believed had punished his wife for not agreeing to have sex the night before …
It took 20 years of waiting and fighting for Morton to clear his name. In 2008, signs of a botched case emerged, when Morton and his lawyers first learned of Eric’s description of his mother’s killer, the check and the credit card use.
In 2011, DNA testing of a bloody bandana found near the crime scene revealed Christine Morton's blood and the DNA of another man – not Morton. That same year, the DNA was matched to Mark Alan Norwood, who had a criminal past including drug possession, assault and burglary charges in California and Texas.
From there, the case against Morton unraveled. After getting a file unsealed that contained an investigator’s reports on the murder, Morton and his legal team discovered that many of the notes – including information about the lurking man and the details about credit card and check fraud – were missing.
The district attorney’s office had withheld it. Morton was released from prison. The Texas Tribune online article 13 August 2016, ‘How Michael Morton’s Wrongful Conviction Has Brought Others to Justice’
MOSELEY, WINSTON: The Witness 2015 -
I was sixteen when my sister Kitty [Genovese] was murdered in New York City. In an instant she was gone. The Witness, 2015, brother, 2015
Police discovered more than thirty people had witnessed her attack and no-one had picked up the phone to call the police. ibid. news report
My sister has been the symbol of bystander apathy for decades. ibid. brother
But recently The Times published a new article: it challenged the accuracy of its original report. And others now claim the story of 38 witnesses is more myth than fact. ibid.
‘For more than half an hour 38 respectable, law-abiding citizens in Queens watched a killer stalk and stab a woman in three separate attacks in Kew Gardens’. ibid. original article
Moseley also confessed to the murder of a woman named Annie Mae Johnson … He shot her four times in the stomach. ibid.
‘I had gone out with intent on finding a woman and killing her.’ ibid. Moseley