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Les indestructibles. FLORIDA MORATORIUM TOUR. Bill is a retired steelworker from Bethlehem Steel, in NW Indiana. Bill became an abolitionist after a fifteen year old girl by the name of Paula Cooper was sentenced to death by the State of Indiana for the murder of his grandmother. Bill was involved in an international effort to have Paula's death sentenced overturned. Bill Pelke is the President and Cofounder of the Journey of Hope...From Violence to Healing, an organization that is led by murder victims families who oppose the death penalty.

Bill has traveled around the world for the last thirteen years speaking out for the abolition of the death penalty. He is also a member of the Board of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, Vice President of Alaskans Against the Death Penalty, a founding board member of Murder Victims Families for Reconciliation and on the advisory board for Citizens United for Alternatives to the Death Penalty. July 11, 1986 was the sentencing hearing for Paula Cooper. November 2, 1986. Paula Cooper. DOB: 08-25-1969 DOC#: 864800 Black Female Lake County Superior Court Judge James Kimbrough Prosecutor: James McNew Defense: Kevin Relphorde Date of Murder: May 14, 1985 Victim(s): Ruth Pelke B/F/78 (No relationship to Cooper)

Paula Cooper

Paula Cooper's 2012 interview : Digital Exclusives: Video. Ex-death row inmate Paula Cooper dead of apparent suicide. Paula Cooper found dead of self-inflicted gunshot wound in IndianapolisSentenced to death in 1986 at 16 after confessing to stabbing 78-year-oldEnraged human rights activists and Pope John Paul II made clemency pleaCooper's death sentence was commuted to prison term by Supreme Court She was released about two years ago after spending 28 years behind bars By Daily Mail Reporter and Associated Press Published: 19:28 GMT, 26 May 2015 | Updated: 14:30 GMT, 29 May 2015 An Indiana woman who became the nation's youngest death row inmate after being found guilty of murder has been found dead.

Ex-death row inmate Paula Cooper dead of apparent suicide

Paula Cooper Release: Ind. woman sentenced to death at 16 to leave prison. (CBS/AP) INDIANAPOLIS - Paula Cooper, an Indiana woman put on death row at age 16 for killing an elderly Bible school teacher, is scheduled to be released Monday after serving a prison term that was shortened after the state Supreme Court intervened.

Paula Cooper Release: Ind. woman sentenced to death at 16 to leave prison

Cooper's death sentence at such a young age sparked international protests and a plea for clemency from Pope John Paul II. Now 43 years old, Cooper is being given a second chance at her life. Cooper was 15 when she and three other teenage girls showed up at Ruth Pelke's house on May 14, 1985, with plans of robbing the 78-year-old Bible school teacher. Pelke let Cooper and two of the teen's companions into her Gary home after they told her they were interested in Bible lessons. As the fourth teen waited outside as a lookout, Cooper stabbed Pelke 33 times with a butcher knife. Cooper's three accomplices were sentenced to prison terms ranging from 25 to 60 years. Since then, the U.S. "There are second chances," she said. Paula Cooper: A second chance at life. Former Death Row Inmate Paula Cooper Found Dead In Indianapolis. INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — An Indiana woman who was once the nation's youngest person on death row but whose sentence was eventually commuted to a prison term was found dead in Indianapolis on Tuesday.

Former Death Row Inmate Paula Cooper Found Dead In Indianapolis

Paula Cooper: Woman on Death Row Set Free After 26 Years Video. Paula Cooper, once youngest death row inmate, found dead. Police: Paula Cooper committed suicide. Indianapolis police: Former teenage death row inmate Paula Cooper dead from apparent suicide. One-Time Youngest Death Row Inmate Paula Cooper Commits ... Paula Cooper, once youngest death row inmate, found ... - MSN.com. Freedom, Finally, After a Life in Prison.

Photo WHEN she was 15 years old, Paula Cooper and three high school classmates in Gary, Ind., decided to cut school and steal some money to play games at a local arcade.

Freedom, Finally, After a Life in Prison

They drank some cheap wine, smoked some pot and walked to the nearby home of a 78-year-old Bible teacher, Ruth Pelke. They figured she might have a jar of money somewhere. The teenagers cajoled their way inside by telling Ms. Pelke that they were interested in Bible lessons. The others stood watch, joined in the slaying or searched for cash. Three girls received long prison sentences. What followed was extraordinary. “She told me how truly sorry she was for what she’d done,” said Mr. More than two million people, most of them in Europe, signed petitions on behalf of Ms. In 1989, Indiana’s Supreme Court commuted Ms. She didn’t know how to use the Internet. She nevertheless got a job cooking hamburgers at Five Guys and soon became a manager.

“You’ve got to have hope,” Ms. On May 26, some two years after her release, Ms. Paula Cooper Free: Woman On Death Row Befriends Victim's Grandson (VIDEO) On death row at 16, Paula Cooper is dead; suicide suspected. Associated Press Posted: 05/26/2015 03:46:51 PM PDT5 Comments|Updated: 4 months ago.

On death row at 16, Paula Cooper is dead; suicide suspected

Police: Paula Cooper committed suicide. Paula Cooper, once US's youngest death row inmate, dead in apparent suicide. Murder of Ruth Pelke. Ruth Pelke was a 78-year-old American from Gary, Indiana, who was murdered by Paula Cooper (August 25, 1969 – May 26, 2015), aged 15, on May 14, 1985.

Murder of Ruth Pelke

Cooper stabbed Pelke 33 times with a butcher knife before stealing ten dollars and her car. A year later, Cooper was sentenced to death on July 11, 1986. Cooper's age and sentence attracted an international uproar, especially in Europe, including a condemnation from Pope John Paul II. In 1989, her sentence was commuted to 60 years in prison.[1] On June 17, 2013, Cooper was released from Rockville Correctional Facility.[2] She died on May 26, 2015, following an apparent suicide.

Background[edit] Cooper's lawyers described her as a victim of sexual abuse who had attended ten different schools by the time of the murder. Sentencing and fallout[edit]