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http://www.wcnc.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/localnews/stories/060406dnmetroutier.7db9f4b.html
In Routier case, time doesn't heal the wounds
[size=+1]Rowlett: A decade later, officers reflect on killing of sons
[/size]
[size=-1]10:03 PM CDT on Saturday, June 3, 2006
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[size=-1]By IAN McCANN / The Dallas Morning News [/size]
File 2001/Staff Photo
Darlie Routier called 911 in June 1996, saying an intruder had attacked two sons.
Every so often, Brownie Sherrill will see a car creep down the street, its occupants' eyes fixed on a prominent two-story house at a bend on Eagle Drive.
By now, he's used to it. For a decade, he and his neighbors have put up with local people and others staring at the site of one of Rowlett's most brutal crimes.
About 2:30 a.m. June 6, 1996, Rowlett police received a 911 call from Darlie Routier saying someone had broken into her home and attacked her sons Damon, 5, and Devon, 6.
Police and paramedics arrived minutes later.
SEE LINK FOR ENTIRE ARTICLE
In Routier case, time doesn't heal the wounds
[size=+1]Rowlett: A decade later, officers reflect on killing of sons
[/size]
[size=-1]10:03 PM CDT on Saturday, June 3, 2006
[/size]
[size=-1]By IAN McCANN / The Dallas Morning News [/size]
Darlie Routier called 911 in June 1996, saying an intruder had attacked two sons.
Every so often, Brownie Sherrill will see a car creep down the street, its occupants' eyes fixed on a prominent two-story house at a bend on Eagle Drive.
By now, he's used to it. For a decade, he and his neighbors have put up with local people and others staring at the site of one of Rowlett's most brutal crimes.
About 2:30 a.m. June 6, 1996, Rowlett police received a 911 call from Darlie Routier saying someone had broken into her home and attacked her sons Damon, 5, and Devon, 6.
Police and paramedics arrived minutes later.
SEE LINK FOR ENTIRE ARTICLE