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Kelsey Ann Smith (May 3, 1989 June 2, 2007) was an Overland Park, Kansas teenage

r who disappeared on June 2, 2007 and was murdered that evening. The story was f
eatured in the international media, including on America's Most Wanted,[2] befor
e her body was found near a lake in Missouri on June 6, 2007.[3]
Contents [hide]
1 Overview
1.1 Abduction and investigation
1.2 Search
1.3 Perpetrator
2 Kelsey Smith Act
3 National media attention
4 References
5 External links
Overview[edit]
Smith was last seen at 7:07 p.m. CST on June 2, 2007 in the parking lot at a Tar
get store at 97th and Quivira, behind the Oak Park Mall in Overland Park, Kansas
. Police, other authorities and the national media launched an extensive publici
ty campaign and search for Smith.
Abduction and investigation[edit]
Surveillance video from Target showed Smith purchasing a present for her boyfrie
nd to celebrate six months together. Her last call had been to her mother from t
he store. She then left the store before she disappeared.[1] Approximately four
hours later, her car, a 1990 era Ford Crown Victoria, was found abandoned outsid
e of Macy's in Oak Park Mall's parking lot across the street.[1] Her purse, wall
et, and the items she had bought were left in the car.[4]
Target stores use a large number of video cameras, and these can often be enhanc
ed internally through their Target Forensic Services division. The surveillance
footage showed her parking her car and entering the store. It even showed where
she was when she called her mother. She picked out the items that were later fou
nd in the car. She did not seem to talk to anyone there except the cashier. Acco
rding to the cashier, she did not see or notice anything unusual in the store an
d not in Kelsey's behavior.
There was however strong evidence that Smith had been abducted; surveillance vid
eo from Target appeared to show someone forcing Smith into her car.[5] The video
at first did not show anything unusual but a careful look once slowed down show
ed a flash in that screen in the direction of Kelsey and her car. The flash was
consistent with someone running when the camera is placed at a distance.
According to the program See No Evil, the Macy's surveillance video showed the c
ar had been left about two hours after her car left the Target lot. The time sta
mp read 9:17pm. A figure in white shirt and dark pants was seen leaving the vehi
cle and running toward the street. However it was too dark at that time to tell
if the figure was male or female. Target video of the parking lot about that tim
e showed a suspicious 1970s-era Chevrolet truck leaving at about that time.
The detectives reasoned that if she were deliberately singled out for abduction,
then her stalker must have been in the store watching her. Going back to the se
curity cameras they noticed that a male figure, who was white and in his early t
wenties, seemed to be in every aisle and in almost every part of the footage sho
wing Kelsey but at a discreet distance. Investigators also noticed he was wearin
g a white shirt and dark shorts. When they looked at the video of her entering t
hey saw him coming in about thirty seconds later. He made no effort to talk to h
er or approach her in the store but left just as she went to the cashier. The su
rveillance showed a good picture of him leaving the store.
While no crime was committed at that point after all he could claim he was just br
owsing the fact that he was in almost every aisle she was in and seem to be lookin
g at her, or at least in her direction, was too much of a coincidence for the po
lice to ignore. Moreover, the man was wearing similar clothing as the figure see
n in the Macy's video. When the video still of the man was released to the media
, it generated hundreds of tips but they were too general to be useful.
Furthermore, when the car was checked for forensic evidence fingerprint experts
isolated all those who had legitimate reasons to be in the car such as Kelsey's
family, friends, and boyfriend. As a result, they found unidentified prints on t
he seat belt.
Finally the investigator looked at the surveillance and expanded it. When they s
aw the Chevy pickup leaving they looked at the earlier footage to see it arrivin
g just before Kelsey drove in. The camera from the front of the store showed the
driver clearly. They reasoned it was the subject and released that footage.
Search[edit]
Police detectives reportedly found the body because of a cell phone ping that or
iginated from the area on June 2,[4] and a number of search areas were identifie
d. Despite efforts by local law enforcement and eventually the FBI, it took Veri
zon Wireless four days to hand over the cell phone records to investigators.[6][
7] There is much controversy on why it took Verizon so long to cooperate with la
w enforcement.[6] A Verizon technician pinpointed a cell phone tower and told in
vestigators to search 1.1 miles north of the tower. Within 45 minutes, on June 6
, 2007, at 1:30 p.m. local time, searchers discovered Smith's body in a wooded a
rea near Longview Lake in southern Jackson County, Grandview, Missouri, 18 to 20
miles from where she had been abducted.[8] Upon report of her death, a website
dedicated to the search for her went offline, and was quickly remade into a dedi
cation site. Through subsequent investigation, the cause of death was determined
to be strangulation. She had been choked with her own belt. The autopsy also sh
owed she was sexually assaulted.
Perpetrator[edit]
A man who had seen the footage of the subject remarked it looked like a neighbor
of his. He joked about it to the neighbor. The next day when he saw the informa
tion on the truck he called in a tip.
On the evening of June 6, 2007, police arrested 26-year-old Edwin Roy "Jack" Hal
l of Olathe, Kansas. Hall was in the process of leaving town with his wife and s
on, supposedly on vacation when the police arrived.
Hall was charged on June 7, 2007 with premeditated first-degree murder and aggra
vated kidnapping. Hall had no adult criminal record, but had a juvenile record o
f assault. Hall, who had been adopted at age seven, had been returned to state c
ustody at age 15 after threatening the family's daughter with a knife. Hall also
assaulted another boy by striking him in the head with a baseball bat, which ma
y account for the juvenile record of assault. Police do not believe Hall knew Sm
ith. At the time of his arrest, Hall was married and the father of a four-year-o
ld son. Hall admitted to being there but claimed he never approached her but soo
n was caught in a lie when his fingerprints matched the ones on the seat belt.
Hall was arraigned via video hookup on June 7, and bond was set at US$5 million.
[9] On Wednesday, August 1, Hall was indicted by a Johnson County, Kansas, grand
jury for murder, rape, and aggravated sodomy. The charges made Hall eligible fo
r the death penalty, which Johnson County District Attorney Phill Kline decided
to seek.
Because the body had been found in a different state (Missouri), some argued for
federal jurisdiction, but because Hall was arrested and in custody in Johnson C
ounty, that jurisdiction had the legal authority to pursue the case.
On July 23, 2008, as part of a plea agreement, Hall pleaded guilty to all four c
harges brought against him.[10] Hall's plea came during what was supposed to be
a change-of-venue hearing. The courtroom was jammed with Smith's parents and oth
er family members, friends and reporters. The hearing was carried live on all fo
ur of Kansas City's network affiliates.
It is believed Hall spotted her driving in after he arrived. He noticed she was
alone and thus began following her in store to assure himself she was not meetin
g anyone. When he saw her about to leave he went to his truck and got his gun. H
e waited until she was most vulnerable, when she was getting ready to leave befo
re he struck. He took her 20 miles away to the Missouri woods where he sexually
assaulted and strangled her.
The hearing came a day after a judge ruled that prosecutors could still seek the
death penalty for Hall after a judge denied a defense motion seeking dismissal
of the case on a technicality.
On September 16, 2008, Johnson County District Judge Peter V. Ruddick sentenced
Hall to life in prison without parole for the kidnapping, rape, and murder. In c
ourt, Hall apologized to Smith's family for his actions.
Hall is incarcerated in the Hutchinson, Kansas, Correctional Facility.[11]
Kelsey Smith Act[edit]
It is believed Verizon Wireless was reluctant to locate or "ping" the cell phone
because of privacy laws governing such actions. Cell phone service providers wo
uld generally comply upon the request of the subscriber, but no one else including
law enforcement authorities, unless a court order was issued which takes time.
This led to creating the Kelsey Smith Act, a law which states in essence that ce
ll phone companies can ping a cell phone if authorities determine the subscriber
is in danger. Most US states have passed the law, and the United States Congres
s is debating federalizing it.
In at least one instance, the law was acted upon, when a thief stole a car with
a baby inside. In February 2015, in Lenexa, not far from where Kelsey Smith grew
up, the man stole the car, unaware of the five-month-old infant in the carseat.
While in flight, he also ran down a pedestrian in a hit-and-run. The police fou
nd the car a half-hour later at a convenience store after having pinged the moth
er's cell phone which was still in a purse on the front seat. The driver escaped
and as of 2015 is still at large. It is believed that once he realized there wa
s a baby inside, he decided to ditch the car, since in addition to car theft and
hit-and-run, he would face kidnapping charges.[12]
National media attention[edit]
Beyond local Kansas City news affiliate coverage, the case received prominent na
tional media attention, including coverage by national news services Fox News Ch
annel,[3] CNN,[13] MSNBC,[14] Nancy Grace, Today Show, The Mind of a Murderer, a
nd on an episode of the television show See No Evil, which aired in Canada on Sl
ice, and in the United States on Investigation Discovery.[15]

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