John Wilson Jr., the man sentenced in the killing of a 14-year-old Indian Head Park young lady, has died
The man, broke into the young lady’s home, killed her when she got back from school
In 2014, a jury found Wilson, who was 41 at that point, at fault for killing Kelli O’Laughlin
The state Division of Remedies said on Thursday that John Wilson Jr., the man sentenced in the killing of a 14-year-old young lady from Indian Head Park, had died.
He died on Tuesday at the Pontiac Remedial Center.
Who was John Wilson Jr.?
A jury sentenced 41-year-old Wilson in 2014 of killing Lyons Municipality Secondary School rookie Kelli O’Laughlin. He got a 160-year jail term.
Wilson put a stone in a weave cap and tossed it through the lounge area window of the young lady’s home in the 6300 block of Keokuk Street on October 27, 2011, breaking into the home.
O’Laughlin stood up to him when she returned home from school. He over and over betrayed O’Laughlin, neck, and chest with a butcher blade that he took from the kitchen’s cutlery block. She was hauled from the family room into the kitchen by him later.
O’Laughlin’s mom found her body. A couple of days after the fact, Wilson was kept. He was released early the time and had three convictions, one of which was for equipped burglary, as per the authorities.
White and privileged 14 year old Kelli O’Laughlin was described as “shiny, happy, and bright” by her best friend. She might have stayed that way for decades to come had she not walked in to her own home after school during a burglary and stabbed to death.
— ExposingWhitePrivilege (@exposing_white) July 13, 2020
Wilson grabbed O’Laughlin’s telephone and posted slanderous remarks on her Facebook page as well as deriding messages to her mom utilizing it.
A Facebook page devoted to O’Laughlin has been made.
Companions of Kelli O’Laughlin, 14, who was found dead in her home on October 27, 2011, left accolades on her Facebook page the next day.
On Nov. 3, after 12 PM, Wilson requested to settle on a telephone decision in the LaGrange Police Division’s police handling room. Wilson got the telephone and hung up immediately.
At the point when Wilson settled on a subsequent decision, it is guaranteed that he encouraged the guest to deal with his mom prior to saying, “Come get my Cricket telephone since it has been with me wherever I’ve been.”
At the point when Wilson was confined, his Cricket cell phone was taken as proof.
Wilson’s telephone went from his South Side location into downtown Chicago beginning at around 6 a.m. on October 27, 2011, as per examination from Cricket cell towers — the brand of Wilson’s telephone — prior to proceeding toward the west rural areas, where telephone action found him in Lyons at around 9 a.m., Raschke affirmed.
A call sent near the O’Laughlins’ home in the 6300 block of Keokuk skipped off a pinnacle a couple of blocks from their Indian Head Park home at 3:22 p.m.
Upon the arrival of the wrongdoing, Wilson’s Cricket telephone conveyed other cell messages that were bounced off the pinnacles of the 7-Eleven, where he had run into a cop and requested a taxi to take him to the Halfway el stop. Cell action soon thereafter showed the telephone heading out south prior to coming to rest near Wilson’s home on the South Side of the city.