Clyde Edwin Hedrick, a suspect in the 'Texas Killing Fields' murders, is under parole review by the Texas Parole Board.
No description availableRead full article: AJ Armstrong’s team prepares for appeals hearing as DA’s Office vows to uphold conviction Texas Education Agency Commissioner Mike Morath, seen in Austin on Sept.
9, 2025, said in a statement that he would recommend a state board suspend the licenses of teachers who are disciplined for comments made on the death of Charlie Kirk.No description availableElmer Wayne HenleyRead full article: Accomplice of Houston’s infamous ‘Candy Man’ serial killer denied parole once again FILE - This undated photo released by the Tennessee Department of Corrections shows Harold Nichols in Tennessee. Drivers brace for months-long I-10 lane closures near downtown HoustonFatal crash inside Houston’s Memorial Park shuts down Memorial Drive in both directionsEastbound lanes of Highway 105 shut down in western Montgomery County after person fatally hit by vehicle Read full article: Eastbound lanes of Highway 105 shut down in western Montgomery County after person fatally hit by vehicle KPRC 2 Investigates Robert Arnold interviews Clyde Hendrick for 'The Evidence Room: The Texas Killing Fields.'The man considered a suspect in the so-called ‘Texas Killing Fields’ murders is under parole review again., Tim Miller, is fighting to keep Hedrick under strict supervision. Miller’s daughter, Laura, is one of four victims in the unsolved ‘Killing Fields’ murders and her death is the reason he foundedTexas EquuSearch founder Tim Miller speaks on 40th anniversary of daughter’s disappearance In 2014, Hedrick was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in the death of Ellen Rae Beason and sentenced to 20 years in prison. Beason died in 1984 and at first her death was ruled undetermined. Hedrick was originally convicted of abuse of a corpse after admitting to hiding Beason’s body under a discarded couch along Old Causeway Road. Hedrick claimed Beason drowned while the pair was swimming and said he hid her body because he panicked. A re-examination of Beason’s body in 2011 determined she died from a blow to the head. After serving eight years in prison, Hedrick was paroled under now defunct ‘mandatory release’ laws. The laws were originally intended to alleviate prison overcrowding by allowing inmates to accrue so-called “good time.” The law passed in 1977 called for the release of an inmate under mandatory supervision if the amount of time spent in prison, plus accrued good time equaled their sentence. The law was later changed to exclude violent felons and to give the parole board discretion, but the changes could not be applied retroactively.Even though Hedrick was convicted in 2014, he had to be sentenced under the laws that were in effect at the time of Beason’s death.Miller is asking the Parole Board to keep Hedrick under SISP and living at a parole halfway house in southwest Houston. While he remains a suspect, Hedrick denies any involvement and has never been charged in the murders of Laura Miller, Heide Villareal Fye, Audrey Cook and Donna Prudhomme.in his 2014 wrongful death civil lawsuit filed against Hedrick over Laura’s death. Miller has never stopped searching for evidence that will help solve these murders. “It appears as though the ‘Killing Fields’ will go on forever and ever and ever as unsolved murders and it’s frustrating,” Miller said.“Clyde Edwin Hedrick evaded justice for 30 years for killing Ellen Beason. In 1984, Hedrick brutally smashed Beason’s skull before hiding her body to decay under a couch under a highway overpass. “In 2014, after persistent investigation by determined law enforcement officers, the Galveston County District Attorney’s Office obtained a manslaughter conviction against Hedrick in Beason’s death. “Even after being convicted of manslaughter for Beason’s death, Hedrick served only about eight years in prison, due to Texas’s pre-1987 mandatory supervision law. When paroled, Hedrick was placed in the Super Intensive Supervision Program with GPS monitoring. The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles is now considering releasing Hedrick from the Super Intensive Supervision Program. “Ellen Beason was not Hedrick’s only victim. The Beason trial revealed that, in addition to killing Beason, Hedrick has a long history of crimes including aggravated sexual assault, aggravated kidnapping, burglary of a habitation, and many other crimes. Given Hedrick’s decades-long record of violent crimes, he is not entitled to any additional leniency and the safety of our community requires that he remain under the strictest supervision allowed by Texas law. The Galveston County District Attorney’s Office will vigorously oppose any action by the Parole Board to relax Hedrick’s supervision.”Award winning investigative journalist who joined KPRC 2 in July 2000. Husband and father of the Master of Disaster and Chaos Gremlin. “I don’t drink coffee to wake up, I wake up to drink coffee.”Inside the hours before a Texas A&M student’s fatal fall from an Austin high-rise apartmentEx-NASCAR driver revs up neurodivergent driving training in Houston'I hear BOOM!': Witness recounts police chase that ends in crash, shooting in HoustonFire rips through Meyerland apartment complex, displacing about 50 residentsWanted teacher at Aldine ISD taught for 2 years before arrest on child sex assault chargesTexas A&M student’s death leaves mother seeking answersRising energy costs hit Houston’s older neighborhoods the hardestCity leaders report rise in accidental child gun deathsGas prices plunging just like the temperatureSarah Hartsfield appeals insulin murder conviction before transfer to state prison Read full article: Sarah Hartsfield appeals insulin murder conviction before transfer to state prisonRead full article: AJ Armstrong’s team prepares for appeals hearing as DA’s Office vows to uphold convictionRead full article: Roughly 350 complaints filed against Texas teachers for alleged comments on killing of Charlie KirkRead full article: Texas lawmakers say colleges have to balance free speech with duty to keep discourse civilRead full article: Accomplice of Houston’s infamous ‘Candy Man’ serial killer denied parole once again
Clyde Edwin Hedrick Tim Miller Texas Parole Board Super Intensive Supervision Ellen Rae Beason Laura Miller Texas Eqqusearch Unsolved Murders Wrongful Death Settlement Parole Review Murder Suspect Intensive Supervision Halfway House Ankle Monitor Investigates
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