Indiana Man Who Beat Pregnant Woman to Death Dies Several Days Before Sentencing

Indiana Man Who Beat Pregnant Woman to Death Dies Several Days Before Sentencing
A prison guard at HMP (Her Majesty's Prison) Pentonville stands behind a locked gate in London, on May 19, 2003. (Ian Waldie/Getty Images)

SOUTH BEND, Indiana—A man who pleaded guilty to the beating death of a pregnant mother in South Bend, Indiana, has died in jail.

The St. Joseph County prosecutor’s office says 78-year-old George Kearney was found unresponsive Saturday night, March 23, in the county jail’s medical unit.

Kearney was pronounced dead early Sunday. His sentencing was set for Friday, March 29, and could face a 60-year prison term.

Authorities say Kearney had been terminally ill and signed an order with jail medical staff to take no lifesaving measures if he stopped breathing.

His guilty plea in the slaying of 28-year-old Miriam Rice came earlier this month.

Rice, was abducted on June 24, 1988, while walking her dog in a park. Her body was found about a week later obscured by foliage down an embankment.

At the time of her death, Rice was married, four months pregnant and had a 3½-year-old child, James Rice.

Kim Shine WNDU 发布于 2019年3月11日周一

James, now 30, told WSBT he was excited and thankful, but also still processing everything.

“I couldn’t believe that a case that was 30 years old would ever be solved or that there would be any new leads or anything,” said James. “The fact that we’re here today is just wild to me I’m honestly still in shock.”

Kearney’s former girlfriend, Barbara Brewster, 56, also was charged with murder last year and is due to stand trial. Brewster has told investigators that Kearney killed Rice.

Kearney, Brewster and Brewster’s three young children were camping and fishing in the park when Rice was killed.

Brewster’s now-adult son, Robert South, told investigators that he saw Kearney drag Rice into their van and his mother beat her in the head with tools that were in the vehicle, according to court documents filed last July by prosecutors.

Kim Shine WNDU 发布于 2019年3月11日周一

His older sister, Paula Brooks, now in her 30s, told investigators that Kearney, Brewster and South left the campsite to get food.

“A couple of hours later she heard a ‘blood-curdling scream’ from across the lagoon from a woman,” St. Joseph County Metro Homicide Unit cold case investigator Brett Coppins wrote in an affidavit. “This unknown woman was pleading for her life. The screaming continued for some time.”

When they returned, all three were covered with blood, Brooks said.

“Robert stated that he has been traumatized by this murder his whole life,” Coppins wrote. “He stated that he has never told anyone what happened because George Kearney threatened to kill him if he did.”

Kearney was arrested in July 1988 in an unrelated case and spent 27 years in prison. After his release, he reached out to investigators in 2016 and said Rice was killed by Brewster, according to the affidavit.

“He stated that he had been getting letters while in prison from Paula (Brewster’s daughter) questioning his involvement in the death of Miriam Rice,” Coppins wrote. “In order to ‘clear the air,’ George Kearney advised officers that he wanted to come forward.”

Brooks also told police she wrote to Kearney in an attempt to get him to admit to “what he had done to Miriam Rice.”

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