Freddie Lee Glenn (born January 6, 1957) is an American
spree killer and rapist. Along with his accomplice, Michael Corbett, Glenn was found guilty of murdering three people in 1975. Glenn and Corbett were responsible for up to five deaths in and around
Colorado Springs, Colorado
Colorado Springs is a home rule municipality in, and the county seat of, El Paso County, Colorado, United States. It is the largest city in El Paso County, with a population of 478,961 at the 2020 United States Census, a 15.02% increase since ...
. Glenn's most notable victim of the crime was Karen Grammer, the younger sister of actor
Kelsey Grammer.
Early life
Glenn was born in
St. Petersburg, Florida, and was of African descent, his father was in the military, and the family lived in
Fort Lewis Fort Lewis may refer to:
*Fort Lewis (Colorado), a former United States Army post (1878–1891) in the U.S. State of Colorado
**Fort Lewis College, a college in the Durango, Colorado, United States
**Fort Lewis Skyhawks, athletic teams of Fort Lewi ...
in
Washington. Glenn claimed that his father was abusive.
Murders
The murders started on June 19, 1975, when Glenn, a civilian employee at
Fort Carson, Corbett, a soldier, and another soldier kidnapped Daniel Van Lone, a 29-year-old cook who was leaving his job at the Four Seasons hotel, intending to rob him. They drove Van Lone to a remote area, made him lie on the ground, and shot him in the head. They stole 50 cents from him. Eight days later, Glenn and Corbett met Winfred Proffitt, 19, another Fort Carson soldier, at Prospect Lake, intending to sell him some marijuana. Having been trained in the use of bayonets, Corbett stabbed Proffitt with one of them to see what it was like.
Glenn and Corbett committed their final and most publicized murder on July 1, 1975. Glenn, Corbett, and two other men decided to rob the
Red Lobster restaurant on South Academy Boulevard. They left without any money. An employee of the restaurant, 18 year-old Karen Grammer, was waiting for her boyfriend to finish work. Thinking she may be able to identify them, the four men kidnapped her. After robbing a
convenience store
A convenience store, convenience shop, corner store or corner shop is a small retail business that stocks a range of everyday items such as coffee, groceries, snack foods, confectionery, soft drinks, ice creams, tobacco products, lottery ticket ...
, the men took Grammer to the apartment they shared, where they
raped her repeatedly. They promised to take Grammer home, then sat her in the car, put a cloth over her head and let her out in a
mobile home park on South Wahsatch Avenue. Glenn, who according to court
testimony had taken
LSD, stabbed Grammer in the throat, back and hand, and left her to die. In an attempt to save herself, she ran toward the back porch of a nearby home where there was a light on; however the homeowners were out. She died at the property leaving bloody hand and fingerprints where she tried to reach the doorbell. Police photographs show a bloody hand print on the wall, near the doorbell. Police were unable to determine who she was until her roommate at the time called to report her missing and subsequently identified her.
Trial and conviction
Glenn was convicted in 1976 for the murders of Daniel Van Lone, Winfred Profitt, and Karen Grammer. Judge Hunter Hardeman, noting "there was no rhyme or reason for what happened," sentenced Glenn to the
gas chamber for Karen Grammer's murder. Two years later, the
Colorado Supreme Court overturned the state's
death penalty
Capital punishment, also known as the death penalty, is the state-sanctioned practice of deliberately killing a person as a punishment for an actual or supposed crime, usually following an authorized, rule-governed process to conclude that t ...
. When Glenn was sentenced, the law allowed
parole after he served 10 years. Because he was sentenced to three consecutive life terms, he became eligible for parole in 2006. Corbett remained in prison until his death in 2019.
Parole denial
In 2009, Glenn was denied parole once after the Colorado Parole Board received a letter from Karen's brother, the actor
Kelsey Grammer, who described Glenn as a "butcher" and a "monster". The Board also heard from other relatives of the victims and from detectives before deciding not to release Glenn from prison. Grammer had originally planned to attend the hearing at the state's
Limon Correctional Facility
The Limon Correctional Facility is a Level IV, mixed-custody Colorado state prison for men, located in Limon, Lincoln County, Colorado, owned and operated by the Colorado Department of Corrections.
History
The facility opened in 1991, and hous ...
, but a rain delay at
New York City's
JFK International Airport caused him to miss a connecting flight to
Denver. Instead, Grammer sent a letter to Robert Russel, the retired
El Paso County, Colorado, District Attorney who successfully prosecuted Glenn. During the hearing, Glenn told the board: "I apologize for my participation in something so terrible. I am sincerely and truly remorseful."
According to his letter to Russel, Grammer described about his sister, who had graduated from high school and decided to take a year off after she attended a semester of college. He also indicated that his sister was said to have moved to
Colorado Springs because of a boy that she liked. Grammer wrote: "She was so smart and good and decent. She wrote poetry and loved being alive; we could laugh for hours together ... I was supposed to protect her—I could not. I have never gotten over it. I was supposed to save her. I could not. It very nearly destroyed me ... When we heard this man might be paroled, the suffering began anew".
Glenn was eligible for parole in 2014, but was denied twice and his request was deferred for three years. At the parole board hearing, Kelsey Grammer gave an emotional testimony via video conference, where he offered forgiveness after being convinced that Glenn was remorseful for killing his sister. However, Grammer has said that Glenn should stay behind bars and serve out the remainder of his life sentence. In 2017, Grammer repeated his position when Glenn became eligible for parole again, in which he stated that Glenn would not deserve freedom in the future.
See also
*
Kelsey Grammer
References
External links
{{DEFAULTSORT:Glenn, Freddie Lee
1957 births
20th-century African-American people
20th-century American criminals
American people convicted of murder
American prisoners sentenced to death
American rapists
American spree killers
Criminals from Colorado
Living people
People convicted of murder by Colorado
People from St. Petersburg, Florida
Prisoners sentenced to death by Colorado