Serial killer victim's daughter has SHOCKING WARNING for families



If you have older family members, you’d think a serial killer would be the least of your worries.

At least that’s what Mary Jo Jennings believed before one morning in 2016.

Jennings called her mother, Leah Corken, at a senior living facility for a routine chat. Corken told her daughter she was about to go get her hair done. That was the last time Jennings heard from her mother.

Jennings was then called into Tradition Prestonwood in North Dallas where she saw her mother, who had seemed healthy, lying in an unusual position with her jewelry missing.

“It was as you can imagine, just beyond sadness, grief, shocked, screaming ‘Mom,’ you know, it was just horrible,” Jennings tells Glenn Beck.

Two years later, on December 12, 2018, Jennings received a phone call from someone warning her that there was reason to believe her mother was a victim of a murderer named Billy Chemirmir.

This was after multiple healthy older women were found dead in similar odd positions with missing jewelry. At Tradition Prestonwood specifically, there were eight potential victims in three and a half months.

However, no one there tied the deaths together — and the assistant executive director of Tradition Prestonwood lied to Jennings, saying that Chemirmir had never been in the facilities.

“He, in fact, was someone who had personally escorted him out of the building. So, I have a lot of anger with that owner, Jonathan Perman.”

The killer himself was accused of killing 22 older women over two years and was convicted for only two murders. He was found dead in his prison cell in rural East Texas.

Jennings says it was explained to her that she would never see that man die in her lifetime, as Chemirmir was sentenced to two consecutive life sentences.

When she found out about his death, she tells Glenn, “I’m not going to lie — I was thrilled.”

Jennings also has a dire warning for families with members in senior living facilities: “check the security,” because the truth is not always what’s advertised.


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THIS is why 22x serial killer was COVERED UP. Prepare to be horrified.



Ted Bundy. Jeffrey Dahmer. Harold Shipman.

You’ve heard of them.

But Billy Chemirmir? The man who murdered at least 22 elderly women between 2016 and 2018?

Why doesn’t that ring a bell?

This is the subject of Glenn Beck and Daniel Horowitz’s conversation.

A deeper dive into the case reveals travesty after travesty. The truth is, there are multiple reasons why this case has been hushed up.

For starters, “we don't know this story because it is an old person dying, and old people die all the time,” says Glenn, “and there is something in our society that is happening that is devaluing the lives of the elderly.”

Second, “nobody did basic police work” despite an overwhelming amount of evidence.

Third, Chemirmir should have been deported on multiple occasions before a single murder took place. He was an illegal alien in the U.S. for an extended period of time before obtaining a green card via a loophole.

Regardless, “he had two DWIs, he had an assault, and then he was even sentenced to 70 days for trespassing,” says Horowitz.

But, of course, Billy was never deported as he should have been, which is what allowed his murderous rampage to ensue.

In multiple senior centers in Dallas and Collin Counties, Chemirmir would “follow the victims into their room as they were slowly walking in, or knock on the door and pose as a maintenance worker, ... and then he would proceed to smother these elderly women with a pillow until they were deceased and then steal the jewelry off their fingers,” Horowitz tells Glenn.

Even though the family of Chemirmir’s first victim reported a missing safe and jewelry, it “went nowhere with police.”

Then, Chemirmir murdered two more victims and stole their jewelry within the same facility, but “it elicited no investigation from police [or] from the facility management.”

But it gets even worse.

Between the first and second murder, Chemirmir was caught trespassing twice at the facility; only after the third time was he sentenced to 70 days in jail, although he served only 12. And yet, this “raised no concerns” regarding the string of identical murders.

Right after being released, Chemirmir found a second facility where he would “troll the hallways for hours on end,” apparently undetected by staff.

He wasn’t even very good at hiding the evidence either. There were “glasses crushed halfway around the room” and “blood on the pillow” in some of the victims’ rooms, but apparently police ignored the glaring evidence, allowing Chemirmir to continue murdering for another two years.

The only reason he was even caught was because one of the final victims had a pacemaker that allowed her to survive the brutal attack and identify Chemirmir.

And while we’re certainly glad he’s been caught, the injustice somehow still continues.

“They're not asking for the death penalty in Texas,” says Glenn, horrified. “If you've got a guy who we know killed 22,” and it was “cold-blooded murder, and he was doing it just for the money — if you can't get a capital case on that guy, well, then the death penalty doesn't exist really in Texas.”

“I think they're getting away with it because no one knows this story,” he says.


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Why is the 'greatest serial murder ever in American history' being COVERED UP?!



Not sure if you’ve noticed, but our culture has become rather apathetic when it comes to death. It seems we can’t even begin to process a tragedy before the next one strikes … and then the next one.

“We have this culture of death,” says Daniel Horowitz. “We become mind-numb robots at a time of the internet where we should know more than ever,” and yet “we know less than ever; we care about less than ever.”

“We’re gonna talk about a story that should be the greatest crime story of our lifetime, and I’m not exaggerating,” he says – a story that is “probably the greatest serial murder ever in American history.”

What’s perhaps most disturbing, however, is the fact that so few people know about this story.

Between the years of 2016 and 2018, Kenyan national Billy Chemirmir was accused of smothering 22 elderly women to death and stealing their jewelry in several different senior centers across the Dallas metroplex.

But there are likely dozens more who died at Chemirir’s hand – victims who will never receive the justice they are owed.

Despite loads of evidence – DNA, blood, stolen jewelry, break-ins, and suspiciously proximate deaths – Chemirmir’s killing spree went on for two years, but “nothing was done security-wise … [or] in terms of police investigators,” Horowitz explains.

It wasn’t until an alleged victim miraculously survived Chemirmir’s attacks that he was finally identified.

However, Chemirmir has only been convicted of two murders and has now escaped the death penalty. Collin County, a notoriously conservative division, “will not seek the death penalty” despite the fact that “they caught the guy a million times over with every form of evidence you can imagine,” says Horowitz.

“This implicates jailbreak; it implicates the lack of death penalty; it implicates our criminal alien problem we have; it implicates the lack of regard for the lives of our seniors – ageism against older people; and frankly also implicates racism, because particularly the older generation is viewed as mainly white and they’re expendable,” says Horowitz.

What’s even more upsetting is that these tragic deaths could have been avoided.

The crime began long before Chemirmir went on his murderous rampage. He was granted a tourist visa in July 2003 from Kenya but became an illegal alien when he overstayed his visa by several years. Somehow, Chemirmir was able to obtain a green card through a marriage that was likely fake, all while living illegally in the United States.

“Just from an immigration standpoint alone, this guy should have been out,” says Horowitz. According to the law, “anyone who remains [in the U.S.] illegally is not only deported but barred from re-entering the country for ten years, but they liberally created this loophole in law and allowed him to remain.”

Further, before the killings began, Chemirmir was indicted on three separate occasions for DWIs and charged with causing bodily injury to his girlfriend.

“This man should have been deported many times over,” Horowitz says.

But he wasn’t, and that’s just the tip of the iceberg. It gets so much worse.

Joining Horowitz on the show are Ellen French House and Cheryl Pangburn, the daughters of two of Chemirmir’s victims.

Together they discuss “the most unbelievable story of all time.”

To hear it, listen to the podcast linked below.

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Horowitz: The notorious alleged murderer of at least 18 seniors will escape death penalty



He's likely the greatest mass murderer of seniors in American history (with the possible exception of Andrew Cuomo). Yet, if you polled most Americans, they've never heard of him because he is a black immigrant who overstayed his visa and all his estimated 18-24+ victims were white seniors. Now, Dallas prosecutors, in shocking news that will escape national scrutiny, announced they will not seek the death penalty.

In a most heinous murder spree that has gone unreported outside Dallas, health care worker Billy Chemirmir was charged in 2019 with murdering 18 seniors ranging in age from the 70s to the 90s over the course of at least two years in north Dallas. He is believed to have used his access to seniors as a health care worker and smothered his victims to steal their jewelry. Civil suits name him as a murderer in at least six other cases, and given the age of some of the potential victims, there is no way of determining who else might have died at his hands.

As I reported at the time, Chemirmir had overstayed his visa from Kenya in 2003, but managed to use a lawless marriage loophole to obtain a green card rather than be deported. Despite racking up a subsequent criminal record, he was never tagged for deportation, which could have saved countless lives.

Here is a timeline of his immigration and criminal history predating the alleged murders that I put together last year.

Fast-forward several years later, and Dallas prosecutors dropped a bombshell on the victims' families. The Dallas Morning News reported last week that Dallas prosecutors will not seek the death penalty and will only go to trial in two of the cases.

Based on a recording of a call between District Attorney John Creuzot and the victims' families obtained by the Dallas Morning News, the DA offered four reasons why he is not seeking the death penalty.

  1. They'd have to travel to Kenya to obtain witnesses describing Chemirmir's past, a task he believes is too arduous.
  2. They'd have to prove Chemirmir is a danger to the prison population, yet he's been in jail since 2018 without incident.
  3. He claimed "society is less accepting" of the death penalty, and many states, including Texas, have either abolished it or moved away from it.
  4. It would take forever to execute him, as most capital cases take over 20 years to complete.

Well, now that Texas is convening a special session of the legislature, perhaps now is the time to step up efforts with the death penalty. I've been proving in my columns for about a decade that our system rarely punishes criminals commensurate to their level of crime, and this is a perfect example. If this man escapes the death penalty, in a state like Texas no less, then that is essentially a signal that nobody will ever get the death penalty.

Just in Houston alone, there are 1,500 pending murder cases, including 500 capital murder cases. As it stands now, many of those who should receive the death penalty will escape justice, and many of those who should face life in prison will get off easier, often with a slap on the wrist. When will the legislatures in red states finally go back to focusing on criminal justice reform on behalf of victims?

If death penalty cases take too long, then it's time to find ways, when appropriate, to expedite them. If they require too many hoops to jump through other than simply proving the criminal murdered another human being in cold blood, then those hoops need to be removed.

It is truly appalling that there have been over 800,000 homicides in this country since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976, yet only about 1,500 have been executed, with another 2,600 currently on death row. The numbers have declined dramatically in recent years, as only about 20 are executed per year, down from near 100 in the 1990s, and recently it has nearly ground to a halt.

Even for the few who are ultimately executed, it takes so many years to carry out the sentence that it has almost no deterrent value. According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, the average death row inmate spends 20 years and three months in prison before execution from the time he is sentenced to death. That is up from about six years in 1984 and just days during the time of our Founding. Even the worst mass shooters remain alive for years, and the longer they linger, the more likely it is that the execution will be canceled altogether.

As Justice Breyer noted in a 1999 case, "Our Constitution was written at a time when delay between sentencing and execution could be measured in days or weeks, not decades." I'd settle for even a few months.

We all know what would happen if this were an American-born white suspect and the victims were 24 black seniors. Not only would the suspect get the death penalty within months, but judging by the response to George Floyd, the rest of us would be held culpable — in a big way. Because the races were reversed, very few people in the country have ever heard of the case, even though in many ways it is the most blood-curdling mass murder of all time.

Just know that there are thousands of staffers, lawyers, and advocates funded by evil people working around the clock on behalf of murderers – to help them escape capital punishment or even life in prison. Who is standing for the most vulnerable victims of perhaps the worst domestic mass murder committed by an individual of all time?