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Johnny S. Clarke & Lisa Straub- young Ohio couple murdered
http://abclocal.go.com/wtvg/story?sectio...id=8281546

SPRINGFIELD TWP., Ohio (WTVG) -- Back in January, 20-year-old Lisa Straub and her boyfriend, 21-year-old Johnny Clark, were both found murdered inside Straub's family home on Longacre Lane. The two had been tied up with bags over their heads. Sunday night, Johnny Clark's family held a prayer vigil.

Johnny Clark's family and friends say they don't want this case to get pushed under the rug. They beg for justice.

Mike Dominque has been friends with Johnny since grade school. They were watching football together on the night Clarke was murdered. Mike Dominque, Clark's best friend, says, "He said he was going to pick up Lisa and go home. I told him, 'I'll see you later, I'll talk to you tomorrow.'"

But that night, Johnny Clarke and his girlfriend were found duct-taped with bags over their heads and dead in Straub's parent's home. Dominque says he didn't think that would be the last time he'd see his best friend.

Clarke's mother still comes to his gravesite everyday. Now more than ever, she wants justice to be served. That's why she held a prayer vigil for Clarke and Straub. "It's six months since they were taken from us by such evil, and I want justice to prevail for these kids. I know I can't bring them back and that hurts more than anything."

Those close to the young couple are begging for someone to come forward with the truth. "Please, what if was your own child? What if it was your own family member? What would you do? You would want justice too," says Clarke's mother.

John Albin, Clarke's coach, says, "I'm here today because I want to see justice served. Somebody has to be arrested sooner or later. We just keep drawing attention to it so it don't get pushed under the rug and forgotten about."

John Albin coached Johnny in baseball for years and says Johnny was like a son to him. When he heard about Johnny's death, he couldn't believe it. Albin says tonight's vigil is all about closure. "I'm here because I want to see closure on this so I can get through this and my family can get through this. And obviously his family."

No one has been arrested or charged in connection with the murders, and Lucas County Sheriff's detectives haven't released any new information
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"It is a capital mistake to theorize before you have all the evidence. It biases the judgment."
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OMG, Dick Tracy you are fast!!!! Just watched it
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(07-31-2011, 11:05 PM)DickTracy Wrote: [url]http://abclocal.go.com/wtvg/story?section=news/local&id=8281546[/url


That's why she held a prayer vigil for Clarke and Straub.


Gee..I wonder why I didn't know about that??

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Be sure to watch the video! Very sad.



link to video:
with thanks to Dick Tracy and OTD Smiley_emoticons_wink LC

http://abclocal.go.com/wtvg/video?id=8281564
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http://www.toledoblade.com/Police-Fire/2...d-Twp.html
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the complete Blade article:

Detective Jeff Kozak
[Image: jeff-kozak-slaying-case-08-01-2011.jpg]

Maytee Clarke
[Image: maytee-vasquez-clark-at-graveside-08-01-2011.jpg]

BY TAYLOR DUNGJEN
BLADE STAFF WRITER

There are days when Maytee Vasquez-Clarke visits her son, Johnny Clarke, several times a day. She lies next to him, talks to him, prays for him.

She wishes her son a good night.

It has been six months since Clarke, 21, and his girlfriend, Lisa Straub, 20, were found dead inside Miss Straub's parents' Springfield Township home.

Mrs. Clarke's husband found their bodies on the floor just before 4 a.m. on Jan. 31. The couple's hands were bound with duct tape, and they had plastic bags over their heads.

The killer came prepared.

At the Lucas County Sheriff's Office, Detective Jeff Kozak keeps reminders of the couple tacked to the wall at eye level across from his desk. There are printouts of the electronic billboards that feature a photograph of Clarke and Miss Straub with "double homicide victims" in bold red letters, the program and a prayer card from Miss Straub's funeral, and a list of questions and thoughts the detective turns over in his mind.

Written in black marker on lined notebook paper, No. 1 reads, "Who knew mom/dad were out of town?" No. 4: "Brought tape with them!"

The case, the circumstances, are troubling.

Detectives work the case every day. They say they are leaving no avenue unexplored, no question unasked.

"Everywhere I go, I have a working file on the homicide with me," Detective Kozak said, putting a hefty brown expandable file on his desk. It is with him, at his side, 24 hours a day, no matter where he goes.

He never knows when the phone will ring with that one bit of information that will put all of the puzzle pieces together.

"I can't tell you how many interviews I've done and how many polygraphs I've done," Detective Kozak said.

A tall filing cabinet in the detective bureau is will likely to be filled soon with information from the investigation.

Investigators are working on filling the fourth drawer now.

"We have more than 100 items in evidence," said Detective Phil Williams.

Detectives Kozak and Williams have been on the case since Day One. About 4 a.m. on Jan. 31, they got the phone call and shortly after were inside the Longacre Lane home.

'It's a nightmare'

It was horrific.
Miss Straub's parents were on a cruise celebrating their 25th wedding anniversary when family members had to call them home.

Jeff and Marybeth Straub could not be reached for comment. Jim Verbosky, Miss Straub's uncle who has been acting as the family spokesman, did not return calls for comment.

"It's a nightmare," Mrs. Clarke said. "I think about it every second of every day of every night of every minute of every hour. It's the worst nightmare. The worst pain. The worst sadness, despair, anguish, the feeling of dread from the time I wake up until I go to bed. It breaks my heart every time I open my eyes and they aren't in the room."

Mrs. Clarke keeps reminders of her son everywhere. Inside her home, she has five shrines to her oldest boy -- one in her bedroom and four downstairs.

There are dozens of photos, if not 100, on her iPhone. She has a photo of Clarke taped to the dashboard of her father's minivan.

On her arm is a new tattoo that says "JC One Love." She plans to add portraits of her son and Miss Straub.

Asked how she's doing, the mother of three said she is "horrible."

It hasn't been easy losing her son, who was also her best friend, she said.

She said she goes to her son's resting place -- she will not refer to it as the cemetery or grave -- at Ottawa Hills Memorial Park every day, sometimes multiple times. She and her 8-year-old son, Jacob, tend to the site, trimming grass around the stone or adding flowers or angels to the elaborate decor, which is visible from the road.

She doesn't leave the house unless it is to visit her son's resting place, and she won't let her other boys visit their friends. The children all have to play at her home.

"I'm stuck in my room day and night unless I'm going out there with him," Mrs. Clarke said. "I feel guilty going out without him because he's not here. … I'm afraid to let [Jacob] go out and play. It has made me really paranoid."

At Clarke's resting place last week, Mrs. Clarke was wearing a red memorial T-shirt and pajama pants.

"I don't even get dressed anymore," she said, hiding behind dark sunglasses.

Her son Jacob stood at her side pointing to various grave sites asking questions about the deceased.

Mrs. Clarke has at least three Facebook pages dedicated to her son and Miss Straub and to finding the person responsible for the "horrendous, sick acts."

Her family, she said, is suffering.

There's never healing

Her 15-year-old son, Jovanny, has "enclosed himself in his room where he doesn't really want to talk to anyone or do anything." Mrs. Clarke pulled him out of school and now he takes classes online.

She and her husband fight -- she blames him for not being able to revive the couple when he broke down the door to the Straubs' home.

"I will scream at him: Why couldn't he bring them back to life? Why couldn't he breathe life into them?" she said. "He says he tried. It is life in hell on Earth every single day."

Mrs. Clarke is not working and her husband is taking time off.

"He's afraid to go to work because he thinks he needs to protect the house because these people are still out there," she said.

Each passing day only gets harder, she said.

"There's never healing," she said. "You never heal from something like this."

Mom will not rest


Lucas County Sheriff’s Detective Jeff Kozak said he keeps the file on the Springfield Township slayings with him at all times and works on the investigation daily.
In an April interview, Mrs. Clarke said she had re-enacted the crime scene in her living room. She bound her hands and positioned herself like Miss Straub and tried to pull a plastic bag off of a stuffed animal's head with her feet -- acting as if the toy was her son.
She's a mother who will not rest.

She was calling the sheriff's office multiple times a day, sending emails and text messages to detectives.

Now she works through daily email messages with Maj. Ron Keel. She wants to know if progress is being made and if the case is still being worked on.

"Be assured, we are working on it daily," Detective Kozak said. "It's my case. I'm not closing it. Period."

Detectives Kozak and Williams knew from the start the case would be difficult.

"It was something I'd never seen before and, in talking to other detectives, they hadn't either," he said.

But the physical toll -- the detectives haven't taken any time off since the homicide -- matches the emotional toll.

"A double homicide is rare to begin with and to have two kids who seem so innocent and are so young, it makes it more heinous," Detective Kozak said. "It's awful, and, you know, we've all got kids."

The detectives don't always go to funerals of cases they work, but the Straub family asked them to come to Miss Straub's private ceremony.

"You get very close very fast with a victim's family," Detective Kozak said. "I wanted to go anyway. Our last picture of Lisa was not something you want to remember, and we wanted to show our support for the family."

When the case started, information and tips coming into Crime Stoppers were flooding detectives' desks. As time has gone on, the information has slowed down.

The detectives start their day by checking Crime Stopper tips and analyzing the information they have.

Is there something, anything, they haven't looked at yet? What are they missing?

Still, they are confident they will solve the case.

"A majority of our day is spent working the case," Detective Kozak said. "Even the stuff that sounds ridiculous we follow up on. We will not put this one away."



















































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This is taking a terrible toll on so many people. I feel bad for every single person involved.

I've never experienced pain like that & I hope I never do.
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link to Blade article.

with reader comments. i always find them interesting.


http://www.toledoblade.com/Police-Fire/2...d-Twp.html

thanks again Dick Tracy and Miss Dirt. Smiley_emoticons_biggrin

















































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A riveting story filled with twists and intrigue!

Filled in all of the blanks.

Thanks, Blade!
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I can understand why the Straub family did not want to be interviewed. This was a human interest story. When the Blade or one of the local TV stations do a story the comments can be brutal. Why subject yourself to that kind of abuse?
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abuse? this was complete softball.

i think the Straubs wanted to be disassociated from maytee.



if you mean the reader comments, that is to be expected. i bet nobody said anything negative about them, i have to check, i've been too busy.

















































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(08-01-2011, 03:21 PM)Lady Cop Wrote: i think the Straubs wanted to be disassociated from maytee. [/b]

Winna Winna chicken dinna!!!

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I don't know if I'm allowed to say peoples' names on here, but I've heard from a lot of different people that M Y was involved. Has anyone else heard anything about that?

read the crime forum rules please.LC

http://mockforums.net/thread-4781.html
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What's LC?
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(08-01-2011, 05:13 PM)iheartyou Wrote: What's LC?

me. Lady Cop. lady_cop i'm the one who just made you a member.


















































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(08-01-2011, 12:32 AM)Older Than Dirt Wrote: Be sure to watch the video! Very sad.
so very sad Signs_173
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(08-01-2011, 05:09 PM)iheartyou Wrote: I don't know if I'm allowed to say peoples' names on here, but I've heard from a lot of different people that M Y was involved. Has anyone else heard anything about that?

MY has been discussed.
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Adub- Do you know if he was discussed in this thread, the first thread, or both?
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Also, MY was an ex boyfriend of Lisa, and is facebook "brothers" with TW's boyfriend. I believe that Maytee's reference about someone in the military was referring to MY.
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