A mysterious jogger, not wearing workout clothes...staring at her.
Strange phone calls from Houston. And November 6, Kocurek described as a normal day...her sister was visiting and they had been to a football game at House Park.
Kocurek’s teenaged son drove on the way home. Her sister and nephew were in the car too.
The judge testified when she pulled into her driveway there was a bag blocking their security gate. Her son thought it was a prank.
When he got out to move the bag, Judge Kocurek described a blast that quote "seemed like forever."
Thinking she was going to be murdered in front of her son, she ducked down and yelled "he got me, he got me!” Kocurek saw the lights of a sedan.
She said 'if I live I’ve got to remember what this looks like.”
Kocurek told the court she collapsed onto her front porch, blood on the steps.
Wondering if her family was the next target. Her sister told her "you are quitting that job."
As Kocurek waited for help to arrive she knew the attempt on her life was related to her job...she just couldn't think why anyone would be mad at her.
After Kocurek’s testimony, the defense called the man on trial...Chimene Onyeri...accused of running a criminal enterprise in Houston. It’s believed Judge Kocurek was going to revoke his bond on a case from Rollingwood and send him to jail when he and two associates plotted the ambush.
After 4 on Thursday afternoon in a very shocking development, Onyeri admitted to shooting Judge Kocurek while being questioned by his own attorneys. He said he put that bag in front of the gate and he waited across the street and thought “she might be a nice person, I’m going to let it go.”
But he didn't let it go. Onyeri claims he didn't know the judge was in the car.
The shots he fired were just meant to scare them.
This is what happened to her after he failed to end her life...
Travis County District Judge Julie Kocurek’s face and arms were riddled with red, open wounds as she lay motionless in a hospital bed.
For 15 consecutive days, she was under anesthesia as she underwent multiple surgeries. She spent three days in a medically-induced coma so doctors could help fight an infection that if untreated could have been fatal, said Dr. Patrick Combs, a plastic surgeon who treats gunshot wound victims.
"She was critically ill at that time," Combs said Monday as he testified Monday during day 12 of Chimene Onyeri’s federal trial.
Onyeri is accused of orchestrating the assassination attempt against Kocurek, who was shot Nov. 6, 2015, outside her Austin home.
Reconstructive surgery, skin grafts and an amputation filled the days and weeks that followed until Kocurek was discharged from the hospital in stable condition on Dec. 15, 2015.
“She had a lot of recovery still,” said Combs, who operated during the majority of Kocurek’s 20 surgeries.
Now, more than two years later, Combs said Kocurek is still recovering. She had another surgery in February and “may require some more as well,” he said.
Her hand, which had an index finger amputated, is functional but Combs said, “it will never be 100 percent what it was before.”
Strange phone calls from Houston. And November 6, Kocurek described as a normal day...her sister was visiting and they had been to a football game at House Park.
Kocurek’s teenaged son drove on the way home. Her sister and nephew were in the car too.
The judge testified when she pulled into her driveway there was a bag blocking their security gate. Her son thought it was a prank.
When he got out to move the bag, Judge Kocurek described a blast that quote "seemed like forever."
Thinking she was going to be murdered in front of her son, she ducked down and yelled "he got me, he got me!” Kocurek saw the lights of a sedan.
She said 'if I live I’ve got to remember what this looks like.”
Kocurek told the court she collapsed onto her front porch, blood on the steps.
Wondering if her family was the next target. Her sister told her "you are quitting that job."
As Kocurek waited for help to arrive she knew the attempt on her life was related to her job...she just couldn't think why anyone would be mad at her.
After Kocurek’s testimony, the defense called the man on trial...Chimene Onyeri...accused of running a criminal enterprise in Houston. It’s believed Judge Kocurek was going to revoke his bond on a case from Rollingwood and send him to jail when he and two associates plotted the ambush.
After 4 on Thursday afternoon in a very shocking development, Onyeri admitted to shooting Judge Kocurek while being questioned by his own attorneys. He said he put that bag in front of the gate and he waited across the street and thought “she might be a nice person, I’m going to let it go.”
But he didn't let it go. Onyeri claims he didn't know the judge was in the car.
The shots he fired were just meant to scare them.
This is what happened to her after he failed to end her life...
Travis County District Judge Julie Kocurek’s face and arms were riddled with red, open wounds as she lay motionless in a hospital bed.
For 15 consecutive days, she was under anesthesia as she underwent multiple surgeries. She spent three days in a medically-induced coma so doctors could help fight an infection that if untreated could have been fatal, said Dr. Patrick Combs, a plastic surgeon who treats gunshot wound victims.
"She was critically ill at that time," Combs said Monday as he testified Monday during day 12 of Chimene Onyeri’s federal trial.
Onyeri is accused of orchestrating the assassination attempt against Kocurek, who was shot Nov. 6, 2015, outside her Austin home.
Reconstructive surgery, skin grafts and an amputation filled the days and weeks that followed until Kocurek was discharged from the hospital in stable condition on Dec. 15, 2015.
“She had a lot of recovery still,” said Combs, who operated during the majority of Kocurek’s 20 surgeries.
Now, more than two years later, Combs said Kocurek is still recovering. She had another surgery in February and “may require some more as well,” he said.
Her hand, which had an index finger amputated, is functional but Combs said, “it will never be 100 percent what it was before.”
from fox7austin.
The first story i did on Chimene was in 2015 here
His father, Innocent Onyeri claims his son was with him the night of the shooting:HERE
He texts 'God is good" after friend gives him Judge's address: HERE
His accomplice testifies against him and says he was scared for his own life. That Onyeri might hurt him since he knew too much: here and HERE
Onyeri upset and announcing to his friends that he failed in murdering Judge Kocurek:here
He texts 'God is good" after friend gives him Judge's address: HERE
His accomplice testifies against him and says he was scared for his own life. That Onyeri might hurt him since he knew too much: here and HERE
Onyeri upset and announcing to his friends that he failed in murdering Judge Kocurek:here
He is also charged in other crimes and murders he has to face AFTER this in Louisiana.here
Chimene murdered Jacobi Alexander in May 2015 after Jacobi was defending a small woman from being beaten by their father, Innocent.
FULL STORY and VIDEO PLEASE VIEW !!!: here
OMG. This is really bad.
ReplyDeleteThank God for the judge's life. I pray she gets more and more better Amen
Another useless one soiling our name in the diaspora. Like father, like son. Useless, destructive men who cannot do an honest day's work. I hope the whole book is thrown at him, his accomplice and father.
ReplyDeleteNot surprised at this at all. That is how they are, useless people who sell their mothers and children for money.
DeleteYou are an idiot. Come and see the numner of seguns anf taiwos in jail here. Ypu soil ate name more than anybody. Yahoo people
Deletehe/she didn't mention a tribe, you don't know if the writer is Yoruba, Hausa, delta..... who's the idiot?
DeleteThank you oh
DeleteThe man is a born criminal
ReplyDeleteThis guy is done. I remember when this happened but never knew a Nigerian was involved. Sad!!
ReplyDeletePlease, let’s stop all this tribal mud slinging. There are bad people in every tribe and place.
I am in Law Enforcement and l have come across several tribes in Jail. The saddest time was when four Nigerians were in my Jail. They were not all igbos or Yorubas. They were Hausa, Igbo and Yoruba. Please let us stop pointing fingers. We are all one regardless.